You are on page 1of 133

SCFI 2012

Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Icebreakers Aff
1AC 1ACInherency/Plan ..................................................................................................................... 4 1ACArctic War Advantage (1/4) ...................................................................................................5 1ACArctic War Advantage (2/4) .................................................................................................. 6 1ACArctic War Advantage (3/4) ...................................................................................................7 1ACArctic War Advantage (3/4) .................................................................................................. 8 1ACSea Lanes Advantage (1/7) .................................................................................................... 9 1ACSea Lanes Advantage (2/7) ..................................................................................................10 1ACSea Lanes Advantage (3/7)................................................................................................... 11 1ACSea Lanes Advantage (4/7) .................................................................................................. 12 1ACSea Lanes Advantage (5/7)................................................................................................... 13 1ACSea Lanes Advantage (6/7) .................................................................................................. 14 1ACSea Lanes Advantage (7/7) ................................................................................................... 15 1ACScience Leadership Advantage (1/8).................................................................................... 16 1ACScience Leadership Advantage (2/8) ................................................................................... 17 1ACScience Leadership Advantage (3/8) ................................................................................... 18 1ACScience Leadership Advantage (4/8) ................................................................................... 19 1ACScience Leadership Advantage (5/8) .................................................................................. 20 1ACScience Leadership Advantage (6/8) ................................................................................... 21 1ACScience Leadership Advantage (7/8) .................................................................................. 22 1ACScience Leadership Advantage (8/8) .................................................................................. 23 Topicality TopicalityJurisdiction ................................................................................................................ 24 TopicalityTerritories/Possessions ............................................................................................. 25 TopicalityTerritories/Possessions ............................................................................................. 26 TopicalityIn the US .....................................................................................................................27 TopicalityGood General Cards................................................................................................... 28 TopicalityMaritime Territories .................................................................................................. 29 TopicalityArctic Transportation Routes .................................................................................... 30 Inherency InherencyNow Key ..................................................................................................................... 31 InherencyMore Ships Needed ................................................................................................... 32 InherencyUnderfunded Now ..................................................................................................... 33 Ships Decaying Now ..................................................................................................................... 34 Current Ships Fail ......................................................................................................................... 35 A2: US Building More ................................................................................................................... 36 A2: 2012 Budget.............................................................................................................................37 A2: Global Warming Solves Ice .................................................................................................... 38 Arctic Advantage Arctic AdvWar Coming .............................................................................................................. 39 Arctic AdvWar Coming .............................................................................................................. 40 Arctic AdvUS Falling Behind ...................................................................................................... 41 Arctic AdvUS Falling Behind ..................................................................................................... 42 Arctic AdvRussia Dominating Now ........................................................................................... 43 Arctic AdvRussia Dominating Now ........................................................................................... 44 Arctic AdvIce Breakers Key ....................................................................................................... 45

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Arctic AdvIce Breakers Key ....................................................................................................... 46 Arctic AdvIce Breakers Key ........................................................................................................47 Arctic War Bad .............................................................................................................................. 48 Russia Dominance Bad ................................................................................................................. 49 Sea Lanes Advantage Sea Lanes AdvIce Blocking Now................................................................................................ 50 Sea Lanes AdvUS Losing Trade Routes Now ............................................................................. 51 Sea Lanes AdvUS Losing Trade Routes Now ............................................................................ 52 Sea Lanes AdvIce Breakers Key ................................................................................................. 53 Sea Lanes AdvIce Breakers Key ................................................................................................. 54 Sea Lanes AdvIce Breakers Key ..................................................................................................55 Sea Lanes AdvArctic Region Key ............................................................................................... 56 Sea Lanes AdvA2: US-China Econ Coop Solves ......................................................................... 57 Sea Lanes AdvShipping Routes GoodEconomy ...................................................................... 58 Sea Lanes AdvShipping Routes GoodHegemony.................................................................... 59 Sea Lanes AdvShipping Routes GoodPiracy ........................................................................... 60 Northwest Passage Good Solves Panama ................................................................................... 61 Science Leadership Advantage Science Leadership AdvI/L ....................................................................................................... 62 Science Leadership AdvI/L ....................................................................................................... 63 Science Leadership AdvI/L Ice Breakers ............................................................................... 64 Science Leadership AdvArctic Key Science Research ............................................................ 65 Science Leadership AdvWarming Research I/L........................................................................ 66 Science Leadership AdvWarming Research I/L.........................................................................67 Science Leadership AdvEnviro Disaster I/L ............................................................................. 68 Science Leadership AdvOil Spills I/L ........................................................................................ 69 Science Leadership AdvOil Spills Bad Enviro ........................................................................ 70 Science Leadership AdvOil Spills Bad Enviro ......................................................................... 71 Science Leadership AdvOil Spills Bad Economy .....................................................................72 Science Leadership AdvA2: Oil Spills Containable ....................................................................73 2AC Add-Ons Emergency Response Add-on ........................................................................................................74 Onshore Infrastructure Add-on ..................................................................................................... 75 Solvency SolvencyAgent Specification.......................................................................................................76 Solvency6 Ice Breakers Solve ..................................................................................................... 77 Solvency2 Ice Breakers Solve .................................................................................................... 78 SolvencyRepair Solves ................................................................................................................79 Contracting Solves ........................................................................................................................ 80 Incremental Funding ..................................................................................................................... 81 Bulbous Bow ................................................................................................................................. 82 SolvencyLaundry List ................................................................................................................ 83 SolvencyA2: Cost ....................................................................................................................... 84 SolvencyA2: Timeframe............................................................................................................. 85 SolvencyA2: Dont Build Enough .............................................................................................. 86

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

AT: Off case arguments A2: Spending................................................................................................................................. 87 A2: Spending................................................................................................................................. 88 A2: PoliticsPlan Popular ............................................................................................................ 89 A2: PoliticsPlan Popular ............................................................................................................ 90 A2: Oil ............................................................................................................................................ 91 A2: Canada Relations.................................................................................................................... 92 A2: Canada Relations.................................................................................................................... 93 A2: Canada Relations.................................................................................................................... 94 A2: Canada Relations.................................................................................................................... 95 A2: Coast Guard Tradeoff ............................................................................................................. 96 A2: Private Actor CP ......................................................................................................................97 A2: Private Actor CP ..................................................................................................................... 98 A2: States CP................................................................................................................................. 99 A2: States CP............................................................................................................................... 100 A2: States CP................................................................................................................................ 101 A2: Refurbish CP .........................................................................................................................102 A2: Foreign Country Contract CP ................................................................................................103 A2: Foreign Country Contract CP ................................................................................................104 A2: LOST CP ................................................................................................................................ 105 A2: LOST CP ................................................................................................................................106 A2: Arctic Drilling CP .................................................................................................................. 107 A2: Consult CP ............................................................................................................................ 108 Negative NEGT-In the US .......................................................................................................................109 NEGT-Transportation Infrastructure ...................................................................................... 110 NEGSquo Solves ........................................................................................................................ 111 NEGA2: Arctic Conflict Advantage........................................................................................... 112 NEGA2: Arctic Conflict Advantage........................................................................................... 113 NEGA2: US Sea Lanes Advantage ............................................................................................ 114 NEGA2: Environment/Oil Spills Advantage ............................................................................ 115 NEGA2: Arctic Resources Advantage ....................................................................................... 116 NEGSolvency ............................................................................................................................ 117 Canada DAUniqueness Relations High................................................................................. 118 Canada DALink......................................................................................................................... 119 Canada DALink.........................................................................................................................120 Canada DACooperation Key ..................................................................................................... 121 Canada DAQuebec Secession Impact ....................................................................................... 122 Coast Guard T/O DALinks ....................................................................................................... 123 Spending DALinks .................................................................................................................... 124 Politics DAPlan Unpopular ....................................................................................................... 125 Politics DAObama Pushes ......................................................................................................... 126 Private Actor CP ........................................................................................................................... 127 Private Actor CP ........................................................................................................................... 128 LOST CP ....................................................................................................................................... 129 LOST CP .......................................................................................................................................130 LOST CP ....................................................................................................................................... 131 Arctic Task Force CP .................................................................................................................... 132 Jones Act CP ................................................................................................................................ 133

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACInherency/Plan
The US currently lacks sufficient ice breaker capabilities to open up sea lanes of transportation around the United States
Beilinson, Deputy Editor of Popular Mechanics, 12 (Jerry, February 17th, Why the U.S.
Must Build More Icebreakers Now, Popular Mechanics, http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/engineering/infrastructure/why-the-us-mustbuild-more-icebreakers-now-6693195) Coast Guard cutters are stationed in the Bering Sea, and C-130s take infrequent flights over American waters beyond the North Slope. However, the United States does not have what youd call a persistent maritime presence in the Arctic, a region with increasing geopolitical importance. Most of the time, The Coast Guard needs more of the ships to prepare for search-and-rescue missions, oil-spill response (offshore drilling by Shell could commence in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas this summer), law enforcement, and plain old flag-waving in northern waters. These ships are also needed for science. The United
States is a leader in oceanography, climate investigations, and all kinds of polar studies, thanks partly to the National Science Foundations first-rate support of research. (In fact, the NSF has overseen the budget for maintaining icebreakers since 2006; the proposed budget properly puts that responsibility back with the military.) But with just one or two working

there are no patrol ships or planes up there at all. Its ironic, but the warming Arctic has actually increased demand for icebreakers.

icebreakers, theres no way the NSF and Coast Guard can accomplish all they need to. When the Healy churned its way to Alaska to help deliver fuel, its maintenance schedule was thrown off. As a result, scientific projects may have to be delayed this summer. To deliver supplies to Americas McMurdo Station in Antarctica each year, the NSF has been relying on foreign-flagged vessels. As PM reported last July, Swedens move to pull its icebreaker Oden off the McMurdo job put the entire 20112012 research season in jeopardy. NSF scrambled and eventually was able to commission a Russian vessel. This feels a lot like the situation in up Americas fleet of icebreakers will resolve such situations while allowing the Coast Guard to react to a changing world.

space: With the retirement of the space shuttle, the United States cant fly astronauts to the International Space Station wi thout a lift from Russian rockets. Now, it appears, the country cant supply its main Antarctic base without Russian help, either. Building

Plan: The United States federal government should modernize the icebreaker fleet for icebreaking operations in the United States.

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACArctic War Advantage (1/4)


Advantage 1 is Arctic War

The Arctic zone will be the next arena for global military conflict the US has fallen behind in the currently militarizing ice race
Huffington Post 4/16/12, Arctic Climate Change Opening Region To New Military
Activity. Eric Talmadge. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/04/16/arctic-climate-changemilitary-activity_n_1427565.html To the world's military leaders, the debate over climate change is long over. They are preparing for a new kind of Cold War in the Arctic, anticipating that rising temperatures there will open up a treasure trove of resources, long-dreamed-of sea lanes and a slew of potential conflicts. By Arctic standards, the region is already buzzing with military activity, and experts believe that will increase significantly in the years ahead. Last month, Norway wrapped up one of the largest Arctic maneuvers ever Exercise Cold Response with 16,300 troops from 14 countries training on
the ice for everything from high intensity warfare to terror threats. Attesting to the harsh conditions, five Norwegian troops were killed when their C-130 Hercules aircraft crashed near the summit of Kebnekaise, Sweden's highest mountain. The U.S., Canada and Denmark held major exercises two months ago, and in an unprecedented move,

the military chiefs of the eight main Arctic powers Canada, the U.S., Russia, Iceland, Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Finland gathered at a Canadian military base last week to specifically discuss regional security issues. None of this means a shooting war is likely at the North Pole any time soon. But as the number of workers and ships increases in the High North to exploit oil and gas reserves, so will the need for policing, border patrols and if push comes to shove military muscle to enforce rival claims. The U.S. Geological Survey estimates that 13 percent of the world's undiscovered oil and 30 percent of its untapped natural gas is in the Arctic. Shipping lanes could be regularly open across the Arctic by 2030 as rising temperatures continue to melt the sea ice, according to
a National Research Council analysis commissioned by the U.S. Navy last year. What countries should do about climate change remains a heated political debate. But that has not stopped north-looking militaries from moving ahead with strategies that assume current trends will continue.

Russia, Canada and the United States have the biggest stakes in the Arctic. With its military budget stretched thin by Iraq, Afghanistan and more pressing issues elsewhere, the United States has been something of a reluctant northern power, though its nuclear-powered submarine fleet, which can navigate for months underwater and below the ice cap, remains second to none. Russia one-third of which lies within the Arctic Circle has been the most aggressive in establishing itself as the emerging region's superpower. Rob Huebert, an associate political science professor at the University of Calgary in Canada, said Russia has recovered enough from its economic troubles of the 1990s to significantly rebuild its Arctic military capabilities, which were a key to the overall Cold War strategy of the Soviet Union, and has increased its bomber patrols and submarine activity. He said that has in turn led other Arctic countries Norway, Denmark and Canada to resume regional military exercises that they had abandoned or cut back on after the Soviet collapse. Even non-Arctic nations such as France have expressed interest in deploying their militaries to the Arctic. "We have an entire ocean region that had previously been closed to the world now opening up," Huebert said. "There are numerous factors now coming together that are mutually reinforcing themselves, causing a buildup of military capabilities in the region. This is only going to increase as time goes on." Noting
that the Arctic is warming twice as fast as the rest of the globe, the U.S. Navy in 2009 announced a beefed-up Arctic Roadmap by its own task force on climate change that called for a three-stage strategy to increase readiness, build cooperative relations with Arctic nations and identify areas of potential conflict. "We want to maintain our edge up there," said Cmdr. Ian Johnson, the captain of the USS Connecticut, which is one of the U.S. Navy's most Arctic-capable nuclear submarines and was deployed to the North Pole last year. "Our interest in the Arctic has never really waned. It remains very important." But

the U.S. remains ill-equipped for large-scale Arctic missions, according to a simulation conducted by the U.S. Naval War College. A summary released last month found the Navy is "inadequately prepared to conduct sustained maritime operations in the Arctic" because it lacks ships able to operate in or near Arctic ice, support facilities and adequate communications. "The findings indicate the Navy is entering a new realm in the Arctic," said Walter Berbrick, a War College professor who participated in the simulation. "Instead of other nations relying on the U.S. Navy for capabilities and resources, sustained operations in the Arctic region will require the Navy to rely on other nations for capabilities and resources." He added that although the U.S. nuclear submarine fleet is a major asset, the Navy has severe gaps elsewhere it doesn't have any icebreakers, for example. The only one in operation belongs to the Coast Guard. The U.S. is
currently mulling whether to add more icebreakers.

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACArctic War Advantage (2/4)


Ice breakers are a key to keeping up failure to modernize the fleet ensures that the US will fall behind
Tyler Davis, Young Leaders Program at Heritage Foundation, 11 (December 9, 2011The Lone Icebreaker: U.S. Sovereignty in the Arctic, http://blog.heritage.org/2011/12/09/the-loneicebreaker-u-s-sovereignty-in-the-arctic/, Heritage foundation) DG The United States Coast Guard is being left behind in the Arctic. While countries such as Russia are building up their icebreaker fleet and actively increasing their presence in the Arctic, the United States is losing its only form of sovereignty in the region. On December 1, Rear Admiral Jeffrey M. Garrett, U.S. Coast Guard, testified before Congress on protecting U.S. sovereignty in the Arctic. He stated in Second Line of Defense that the Icebreaker fleet represents the main surface presence that the U.S. can exert in what is essentially a maritime domain in the Arctic Ocean. Yet today, the Coast Guard has an icebreaker fleet of only three ships. Worse yet, two of these ships are out of commission due to maintenance work and will not be available for at least seven more years. The lone icebreaker in commission is the USCGC Healy, which conducts all types of missions from search and rescue to navigational aid to scientific research. Though the ship has been effective at its job in the Arctic, it is designed to break through ice of only medium thickness; for ice of heavy thickness, the Healy is absolutely useless. And like the other two icebreakers, it is quickly aging. Without efforts to modernize the fleet, the future of the U.S. national maritime interest and security in the Arctic is looking pretty bleak. Icebreakers are a necessity in the region, and without them the U.S. might as well throw in the towel. These ships are key to year-round access to the Arctic and are the only U.S. insurance policy for future hazardous events. If something happens to the Healy, then the United States would not only lose access to the region but would not be able to react to potential oil spills and would become less effective in search-and-rescue missions. Complicating matters even further, ice in the Arctic is melting, producing more ocean area for the transportation of goods and services in the region. Essentially, whoever best utilizes this route will control trade and transportation of goods and materials in the upper hemisphere. With all other nations around the Arctic building their icebreaker fleets and exploiting the key transportation route that connects the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, the United States is falling behind. In order to
create an icebreaking fleet to maintain U.S. presence in the region, the Administration should look toward privatizing the fleet. Allowing private companies to own and operate the U.S. icebreaking fleet and perform national security functions would not only allow for crucial modernization but also save federal dollars and expand U.S. capabilities in the Arctic. This is particularly important at a time when the government is looking to cut

Ultimately, something must be done. If the U.S. does not act fast, it will come in last in the race for the Arctic.
corners in federal spending.

Ice breakers are the biggest internal link to all US activity in the Arctic the plan is key to ensuring US leadership
ORourke, specialist in naval affairs, 6/14. Ronald ORourke Coast Guard Polar
Icebreaker Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress. Congressional Research Service. http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/weapons/RL34391.pdf ***[The study] concludes that future capability and capacity gaps will significantly impact four [Coast Guard] mission areas in the Arctic: Defense Readiness, Ice Operations, Marine Environmental Protection, and Ports, Waterways, and Coastal Security. These mission areas address the protection of important national interests in a geographic area where other nations are actively pursuing their own national goals.... The common and dominant contributor to these significant mission impacts is the gap in polar icebreaking capability. The increasing obsolescence of the Coast Guards icebreaker fleet will further exacerbate mission performance gaps in the coming years.... The gap in polar icebreaking capacity has resulted in a lack of at-sea time for crews and senior personnel and a corresponding gap in training and leadership. In addition to providing multi-mission capability and intrinsic

mobility, a helicopter-capable surface unit would eliminate the need for acquiring an expensive shore-based infrastructure that may only be needed on a seasonal or occasional basis. The most capable surface unit would be a polar icebreaker.

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACArctic War Advantage (3/4)


Polar icebreakers can transit safely in a variety of ice conditions and have the endurance to operate far from logistics bases. The Coast Guards polar icebreakers have conducted a wide range of planned and unscheduled Coast Guard missions in the past. Polar icebreakers possess the ability to carry large numbers of passengers, cargo, boats, and helicopters. Polar icebreakers also have substantial command, control, and communications capabilities. The flexibility and mobility of polar icebreakers would assist the Coast Guard in closing future mission performance gaps effectively.... 17 For

examples of bill and report language in recent years relating to the study of Coast Guard missions and capabilities for operations in high latitude areas, see Appendix C. Coast Guard Polar Icebreaker Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress Congressional Research Service 9 Existing capability and capacity gaps are expected to significantly impact future Coast Guard performance in two Antarctic mission areas: Defense Readiness and Ice Operations. Future gaps may involve an

inability to carry out probable and easily projected mission requirements, such as the McMurdo resupply, or readiness to respond to less-predictable events. By their nature, contingencies requiring the use of military capabilities often occur quickly. As is the case in the Arctic, the deterioration of the Coast Guards icebreaker fleet is the primary driver for this significant mission impact. This will further widen mission performance gaps in the coming years. The recently issued Naval Operations Concept 2010 requires a surface presence in both the Arctic and Antarctic. This further exacerbates the capability gap left by the deterioration of the icebreaker fleet .... The
significant deterioration of the Coast Guard icebreaker fleet and the emerging mission demands to meet future functional requirements in the high latitude regions dictate that the Coast Guard acquire material solutions to close the capability gaps.... To meet the Coast Guard mission functional requirement, the Coast Guard icebreaking fleet must be capable of

supporting the following missions: Arctic North Patrol. Continuous multimission icebreaker presence in the Arctic. Arctic West Science. Spring and summer science support in the Arctic. Antarctic, McMurdo Station resupply. Planned deployment for break-in, supply ship escort, and science support. This

mission, conducted in the Antarctic summer, also requires standby icebreaker support for backup in the event the primary vessel cannot complete the mission. Thule Air Base Resupply and Polar Region Freedom of Navigation Transits. Provide vessel escort operations in support of the Military Sealift Commands Operation Pacer Goose; then complete any Freedom of Navigation exercises in the region. In addition, the joint Naval Operations Concept establishes the following mission requirements: Assured access and assertion of U.S. policy in the Polar Regions. The current demand for this mission requires continuous icebreaker presence in both Polar Regions.

This allows the US to play a critical role in de-escalating Arctic conflict


NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World: An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) In the Arctic, economic activity is expected to increase as the southern extent of the Arctic summer ice pack thins, providing opportunity for ice-capable ships to travel through these regions. Greater human activity will increase the need for the United States to assert a more active and influential presence in the Arctic to protect not only its territorial interests, but also its presence as a world power concerned with the security, economic, scientific, and international political issues of the region. Icebreakers will play a critical role in supporting U.S. interests because the
sea-ice margin does not retreat uniformly or predictably, which may create difficult ice conditions in these waters. Possible U.S. ratification of the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea will require the United States to collect

data to extend its economic zone and/or to counter territorial claims by other Arctic nations.
Icebreakers will be needed to provide access to ice-covered waters to acquire this necessary data.

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACArctic War Advantage (3/4)


Absent de-escalation, current militarization will ensures Arctic conflicts go nuclear
Wallace and Staples, 10(Michael Wallace and Steven Staples. *Professor Emeritus at the
University of British Columbia AND ** President of the Rideau Institute in Ottawa Ridding the Arctic of Nuclear Weapons: A Task Long Overdue,http://www.arcticsecurity.org/docs/arcticnuclear-report-web.pdf) DG The fact is, the Arctic is becoming a zone of increased military competition. Russian President Medvedev has announced the creation of a special military force to defend Arctic claims . Last year Russian General Vladimir Shamanov declared that Russian troops would step up training for Arctic combat, and that Russias submarine fleet would increase its operational radius. 55 Recently, two Russian attack submarines were spotted off the U.S. east coast for the first time in 15 years. 56 In January 2009, on the eve of Obamas inauguration, President Bush issued a National Security Presidential Directive on Arctic Regional Policy. It affirmed as a priority the preservation of U.S. military vessel and aircraft mobility and transit throughout the Arctic, including the Northwest Passage, and foresaw greater capabilities to protect U.S.

borders in the Arctic. 57 The Bush administrations disastrous eight years in office, particularly its decision to withdraw from the ABM treaty and deploy missile defence interceptors and a radar station in Eastern Europe, have greatly contributed to the instability we are seeing today, even though the Obama administration has scaled back the planned deployments. The Arctic has

figured in this renewed interest in Cold War weapons systems, particularly the upgrading of the Thule Ballistic Missile Early Warning System radar in Northern Greenland for ballistic missile defence. The Canadian government, as well, has put forward new military capabilities to protect Canadian sovereignty claims in the Arctic, including proposed ice-capable ships, a northern military training base and a deep-water port. Earlier this year Denmark released an all-party defence position paper that suggests the country should create a dedicated Arctic military contingent that draws on army, navy and air force assets with shipbased helicopters able to drop troops anywhere. 58 Danish fighter planes would be tasked to patrol Greenlandic airspace. Last year Norway chose to buy 48 Lockheed Martin F-35 fighter jets, partly because of their suitability for Arctic patrols. In March, that country held a major Arctic military practice involving 7,000 soldiers from 13 countries in which a fictional country called Northland seized offshore oil rigs. 59 The manoeuvres prompted a protest from Russia which objected again in June after Sweden held its largest northern military exercise since the end of the Second World War. About 12,000 troops, 50 aircraft and several warships were involved. 609 Ridding the Arctic of Nuclear Weapons: A Task Long Overdue Jayantha Dhanapala, President of Pugwash and former UN under-secretary for disarmament affairs, summarized the situation bluntly: From those in the international peace and security sector, deep concerns are being expressed over the fact that two nuclear weapon states the United States and the Russian Federation, which together own 95 per cent of the nuclear weapons in the world converge on the Arctic and have competing claims. These claims, together with those of other allied NATO countries Canada, Denmark, Iceland, and Norway could, if unresolved, lead to conflict escalating into the threat or use of nuclear weapons. 61 Many will no doubt argue that this is excessively alarmist, but no circumstance in which nuclear powers find themselves in military confrontation can be taken lightly. The current geo-political threat level is nebulous and low for now, according to Rob Huebert of the University of
Calgary, [the] issue is the uncertainty as Arctic states and non-Arctic states begin to recognize the geo-political/economic significance of the Arctic because of climate change. 62

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACSea Lanes Advantage (1/7)


Advantage 2 is sea lanes

China is currently exploiting the Arctic to overtake the US economically failure to develop ice breakers cedes the region to Chinese economic dominance
Beilinson, Deputy Editor of Popular Mechanics, 12 (Jerry, February 17th, Why the U.S.
Must Build More Icebreakers Now, Popular Mechanics, http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/engineering/infrastructure/why-the-us-mustbuild-more-icebreakers-now-6693195) China, a country with no Arctic coast, is building icebreakersand that should get Americas attention. Its one thing for Russia, with the worlds longest Arctic coastline, to operate a couple dozen of the ships. (Fortunately, theyre available for leasing, at a price.) Its understandable, maybe, for Finland, Sweden, and Canada to surpass the United States in this area. But why is China constructing an 8000-ton vessel capable of breaking through 4.5 ft of ice at a steady clip, to join the XueLong, its existing ice-class vessel? In fact, Chinas interest is unsurprising given its role as a world economic power. Commercial ships are already traversing the Northern Sea Route above Russia, carrying goods between Europe and East Asia. Often,

icebreakers go along as insurance against bad conditions. And soon, ships will start carrying liquefied natural gas from Norway along the route. Traffic through the Northwest Passage above Canada is building more slowly, and talk of the Arctic sea routes competing with the Suez Canal is overblown. Nevertheless, the Bering Strait between Alaska and Russia is already

getting crowded. According to Rear Adm. Thomas P. Ostebo, who commands the U.S. Coast Guard in Alaska, about 1000 vessel transits take place in the Strait each summer. Thats Americas backyard.

Ice breakers are key to giving the US economic control of Arctic sea lanes solves Chinese dominance and allows the US to control the international economy
Treadwell, Lieutenant Governor of Alaska, 11 (Mead, December 1, America is Missing the
Boat Congressional Testimony United States House of Representatives Committee Transportation on Transportation and Infrastructure Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation, http://republicans.transportation.house.gov/Media/file/TestimonyCGMT/2011-12-1Treadwell.pdf) Meanwhile, other Arctic and circumpolar nations are investing in fleets of icebreakers. The report of exactly how
many ships are being operated by other countries varies (some count polar, medium and light icebreakers, as well as ice strengthened or capable vessels), but all the tallies make one thing clear: other

nations have seen the writing on the wall and are investing in infrastructure. Sweden has at least four vessels; Finland, at least six; and Russia over two dozen (and counting). Canada has about eight, and even the European Union is constructing an icebreaker a heavy, polar class icebreaker. 3 Our Arctic neighbors are leaps and bounds ahead of our position, and non-Arctic nations are in hot pursuit. A Chinese researcher, Mr. Li Zhenfu of Dalian Maritime University, writes that, Whoever has control of the Arctic route will control the new passage of world economics and international strategies. The prospect of commercial and strategic opportunities presented by receding sea ice cover and accessibility of Arctic resources has moved the Chinese government to allocate more resources for Arctic research, and they have asked to join the Arctic Council as an observer. Chinas Rear Admiral Yin Zhuo has asserted that no nation has sovereignty over the Arctic, and said that China must plan to have an indispensable role in Arctic exploration as they have one-fifth of
the worlds population.

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACSea Lanes Advantage (2/7)


Relative US economic strength key to preventing aggressive Chinese adventurism and war over Taiwan
Pape, PolSci Prof at UChicago, 9 (Robert, January, Empire Falls
http://nationalinterest.org/article/empire-falls-2952) Over time, America's power is fundamentally a result of its economic strength. Productive capacity-defined by indicators such as wealth, technology and population size-is a prerequisite for building and modernizing military forces . The United States, like any state, may choose to vary the degree to which its productive capacities are used to create military assets. But it is the economy as a whole that constrains the choice. And the size of the economy relative to potential rivals ultimately determines the limits of power in international politics. Major assessments of this relative position have long turned heavily on a single statistic: America's share of world economic product. Advocates of extending America's

unipolar dominance are well aware of the central importance of the economic foundations of American power and routinely present detailed statistics on the U.S. share of world product. The basic notion is simple: take U.S. domestic product in any year and divide it by the aggregate total of the gross domestic product of all states in the world. To measure gross domestic product, the unipolar-dominance school prefers to compare every country's output in current-year U.S. dollars, a method that tends to show America is much further ahead of other countries than alternative measures. Indeed, the most recent call for America to exploit its hegemonic position (published in 2008) rests on the presumption of U.S. dominance based on the current-year dollar figures.2 By this metric, in 2006 the United States had 28 percent of world product while its nearest most likely competitor, China, had 6 percent. Looks pretty good for America, right? Alas, single-year "snapshots" of America's relative power are of limited value for assessing the sustainability of its grand strategy over many years. For grand-strategic concerns-especially how well the United States can balance its resources and foreign-policy commitments-the trajectory of American power compared to other states is of seminal importance. For the sake of argument, let us start with the unipolar-dominance school's preferred measure of American hegemony, but look at the trajectory of the data over time. According to GDP figures in current U.S. dollars from the International Monetary

the United States increased its share of world production during the 1990s, reached its apogee in 2000, and then began to steadily lose ground during the eight years of the Bush administration, with its relative power ultimately falling by nearly a quarter in the first decade of the twenty-first century. At the same time, the relative power of China, the state many consider America's most likely future rival, has grown consistently. If we look out as far as the IMF can see (2013), things get even worse-with the United States expected to continue declining and China to continue rising. The United States has been going through the first decade of the
Fund (IMF), twenty-first century not stronger than before, but substantially weaker. How good are the numbers? Economists commonly use two other methods to calculate GDP, constantdollar calculations and purchasing power parity.3 Although each offers advantages and disadvantages, for our purposes what matters is that they form a lower bound of America's relative decline. And regardless of the metric, the trend is the same. Again using IMF figures, Table 2 shows the trajectory of the share of world product for the United

the United States is now a declining power. This new reality has tremendous implications for the future of American grand strategy. THE EROSION of the underpinnings of U.S. power is the result of uneven rates of economic growth between America, China and other states in the world. Despite all the pro-economy talk from the Bush administration, the fact is that since 2000, U.S. growth rates are down almost 50 percent from the Clinton years. This trajectory is almost sure to be revised further downward as the consequences of the financial
States and China using both alternative measures. Simply put,

crisis in fall 2008 become manifest. As Table 3 shows, over the past two decades, the average rate of U.S. growth has fallen considerably, from nearly 4 percent annually during the Clinton years to just over 2 percent per year under Bush. At the same time, China has sustained a consistently high rate of growth of 10 percent per year-a truly stunning performance. Russia has also turned its economic trajectory around, from year after year of losses in the 1990s to significant annual gains since 2000. Worse, America's decline was well under way before the economic downturn, which is likely to only further weaken U.S. power. As the most recent growth estimates (November 2008) by the IMF make clear, although all major countries are suffering economically, China and Russia are expected to continue growing at a substantially greater rate than the United States. True,

the ability to diffuse new technology-to turn chalkboard ideas into mass-produced applications-has been spreading rapidly across many parts of the globe, and with it the ultimate sources of state powerproductive capacities. America is losing its overwhelming technological dominance in the leading industries of the knowledge economy. In past eras-the "age of iron" and the "age of steel"-leading states retained their technological
the United States has not lost its position as the most innovative country in the world, with more patents each year than in all other countries combined. However, advantages for many decades.4 As Fareed Zakaria describes in his recent book, The Post-American World, technology and knowledge diffuse more quickly today, and their

rapid global diffusion is a profound factor driving down America's power compared to other countries. For instance, although the United States remains well ahead of China on many indicators of leading technology on a per capita basis, this grossly under-weights the size of the knowledge economy in China compared to America. Whereas in 2000, the United States had three times the computer sales, five times the internet users and forty times the broadband
subscribers as China, in 2008, the Chinese have caught or nearly caught up with Americans in every category in the aggregate.5 The fact that the United States remains ahead of

China, with more than four times the U.S. population, can create many more knowledge workers in the future. So, how much is U.S. decline due to the global diffusion of technology, U.S. economic
China on a per capita basis does matter-it means that

weaknesses under Bush or China's superior economic performance? Although precise answers are not possible, one can gain a rough weighting of the factors behind America's shrinking share of world production by asking a few simple counterfactual questions of the data. What would happen if we assumed that the United States grew during the Bush years at the same rate as during Clinton's? What would have happened had the world continued on its same trajectory, but we assume China did not grow at such an astounding rate? Of course, these are merely thought experiments, which leave out all manner of technical problems like "interaction effects." Still, these back-of-the-envelope approximations serve as useful starting points. The answers are pretty straightforward. Had the American economy grown at the (Clinton) rate of 3.7 percent per year from 2000 to 2008 instead of the (Bush) rate of 2.2 percent, the United States would have had a bigger economy in absolute terms and would have lost less power relative to others. Assuming the rest of the world continued at its actual rate of growth, America's share of world product in 2008 would have risen to 25.2 percent instead of its actual 23.1 percent.6 When compared to the share of gross world product lost by the United States from 2000 to 2008-7.7 percent-the assumed marginal gain of 2.1 percent of world product amounts to some 27 percent of the U.S. decline.

10

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACSea Lanes Advantage (3/7)


How much does China matter? Imagine the extreme case-that China had not grown, and the United States and the rest of the world continued along their actual path of economic growth since 2000. If so, America's share of world product in 2008 would be 24.3 percent, or 1.2 percent more than today. When compared to the share of world product lost by the United States from 2000 to 2008-7.7 percent-the assumed marginal gain of 1.2 percent of world product accounts for about 15 percent of the U.S. decline.

estimates suggest that roughly a quarter of America's relative decline is due to U.S. economic weaknesses (spending on the Iraq War, tax cuts, current-account deficits, etc.), a sixth to China's superior performance and just over half to the spread of technology to the rest of the world. In other words, self-inflicted
These wounds of the Bush years significantly exacerbated America's decline, both by making the decline steeper and faster and crowding out productive investment that could have stimulated innovation to improve matters. All of this has led to one of the most significant declines of any state since the mid-nineteenth century. And when one examines past declines and their consequences, it becomes clear both that the U.S. fall is remarkable and that in share of world product. changed.

dangerous instability in the international system may lie ahead. If we end up believing in the wishful thinking of unipolar dominance forever, the costs could be far higher than a simple percentage drop
THE UNITED States has always prided itself on exceptionalism, and the U.S. downfall is indeed extraordinary. Something fundamental has

America's relative decline since 2000 of some 30 percent represents a far greater loss of relative power in a shorter time than any power shift among European great powers from roughly the end of the Napoleonic Wars to World War II. It is one of the largest relative declines in modern history. Indeed, in size, it is clearly surpassed by only one other great-power decline, the unexpected internal collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Most disturbing, whenever there are major changes in the balance of power, conflict routinely ensues. Examining the historical record reveals an important pattern: the states facing the largest declines in power compared to other major powers were apt to be the target of opportunistic aggression. And this is surely not the only possible danger from relative decline; states on the power wane also have a history of launching preventive wars to strengthen their positions. All of this suggests that major relative
declines are often accompanied by highly dangerous international environments. So, these declines matter not just in terms of economics, but also because of their destabilizing consequences. in point. Compared to other great powers on the European continent, its power declined the most during the mid-nineteenth century. And, it became the target of opportunistic aggression by the state with the greatest rising power, Great Britain, during the Crimean War (1854-1856). Indeed, the consequences of Russia's decline were not fully recognizable until the war itself. Though Russia was still a great power and the war cost Britain and France more than expected, Russia emerged the clear loser. Russia's inability to defend the status quo in the Crimea confirmed its grand-strategic weaknesses, and ultimately left it worse-off than had it anticipated its vulnerabilities and sought to negotiate a reduction in its military commitments to the region peacefully. Considering that the Crimea conflict left Russia with fairly gaping wounds, and that even its slow 10 percent decline in relative power over twenty years left the country bruised and battered, one might

Tsarist Russia presents the first case

similar destabilization occurred in the two decades before World War I and before World War II, when France and Great Britain were declining European powers. In both instances, France and Britain became targets of opportunistic aggression by one of the strongest rising powers in the region: Germany. And as a small cottage industry of scholarship suggests, Germany's fairly modest relative declines compared to Russia prior to World War I and the Soviet
wonder how our far more rapid descent might play out. Meanwhile, case of France and Britain, and Russia-later the Soviet Union-relative to Germany). Of course, this only served to increase the danger. But again,

Union prior to World War II encouraged German leaders to wage preventive wars. Again, these declines occurred as another power was concomitantly rising (Germany in the

these rises and falls were less precipitous than America's current losses, and our descent appears far trickier to navigate. As we look to address our current fall from grace, lest we forget, the United States faced two major declines of its power during the cold war as well. Neither

was without risk. The first occurred shortly after World War II, when the devastation of the Soviet, European and many Asian economies, combined with the increasingly productive American economy, left the United States with a far larger share of gross world product-41 percent in 1948-than it even possessed in the age of unipolar dominance beginning in 1991. As the war-torn economies recovered, U.S. share of world product fell 20 percent by 1961 while that of its main rival, the Soviet Union, grew by 167 percent. This relative American decline corresponds to the height of U.S.-Soviet cold-war rivalry in Europe and Asia. Eight of the nine U.S.-Soviet nuclear crises occurred from 19481962, all of which involved efforts by the Soviet Union or its allies to revise the political status quo in their favor7-that is, all could be reasonably interpreted as instances in which the United States or its allies became the targets of opportunistic aggression. The second major U.S. relative decline occurred from 1970 to 1980, when the U.S. share of world product fell 27 percent. This decade brought with it challenges to America's position in the world. This was especially true toward the end of the decade with the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the Iranian Revolution, which collectively increased concern about Soviet dominance of Persian Gulf oil. However, the 1970s was mainly a period of "dtente" between the cold-war protagonists, which corresponds to the fact that the shares of world product for both the United States and the Soviet Union were in decline. In other words, it is reasonable to think that America's decline in the 1970s did not lead to more significant trouble for the United States because its main rival was descending even

major shifts in the balance of power in the international system often lead to instability and conflict. And America's current predicament is far more severe. This time, our relative decline of 32 percent is accompanied, not by an even-steeper decline of our near-peer competitor, but rather by a 144 percent increase in China's relative position. Further, the rapid spread of technology and technological
faster. Clearly,

breakthroughs means that one great discovery does not buoy an already-strong state to decades-long predominance. And with a rising China-with raw resources of population, landmass and increasing adoption of leading technology-a true peer competitor is looming. America's current, rapid domestic economic decline is merely accelerating our own downfall. The distinct quality of a system with only one superpower is that no other single state is powerful enough to balance against it. A true global hegemon is more powerful still-stronger than all second-ranked powers acting as members of a counterbalancing coalition seeking to contain the unipolar leader. By these standards, America's relative decline is fundamentally changing international politics, and is fundamentally different from Russia circa 1850 and Great Britain circa 1910. In current-U.S.-dollar terms-the preferred measure of the unipolar-dominance school-the United States has already fallen far from being a global hegemon and unipolarity itself is waning, since China will soon have as much economic potential to balance the United States as did the Soviet Union during the cold war. At the beginning of the 1990s, the United States was indeed not only stronger than any other state individually, but its power relative to even the collective power of all other major states combined grew from 1990 to 2000. Although the growth was small, America almost reached the crucial threshold of 50 percent of major-power product necessary to become a true global hegemon. So it is understandable that we were lulled into a sense of security, believing we could do as we wished, whenever and wherever we wished. The instability and danger of the cold war quickly became a distant memory. Near the time of the Iraq War, it would have required virtually every major power to actively oppose the United States in order to assemble a counterbalancing coalition that could approximate America's potential power. Under the circumstances, hard, military balancing against the United States was not a serious possibility. So, it is not surprising that major powers opted for soft-balancing measures-relying on institutional, economic and diplomatic tools to oppose American military power. And yet we are beginning to see "the conflict of history" repeat itself. Even with less relative power, in the run-up to the Iraq War, people grossly underrated the ability of Germany, France, Russia and China, along with important regional powers like Turkey, to soft balance against the United States; for instance, to use the United Nations to delay, complicate and ultimately deny the use of one-third of U.S. combat power (the Fourth Infantry Division) in the opening months of the Iraq War. This is not yet great-power war of the kind seen in centuries past, but it harkens the instability that future unilateral efforts may trigger.

11

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACSea Lanes Advantage (4/7)


The balance of world power circa 2008 and 2013 shows a disturbing trend. True, the United States remains stronger than any other state individually, but its power to stand up to the collective opposition of other major powers is falling precipitously. Though these worlds depict potential power, not active counterbalancing
coalitions, and this type of alliance may never form, nonetheless, American relative power is declining to the point where even subsets of major powers acting in concert could produce sufficient military power to stand a reasonable chance of successfully opposing American military policies. Indeed, 2013 and beyond,

if present trends continue to China and Russia, along with any one of the other major powers, would have sufficient economic capacity to mount military opposition at least as serious as did the Soviet Union during the cold
war. And it is worth remembering that the Soviet Union never had more than about half the world product of the United States, which China alone is likely to reach in the coming decade. The faults in the arguments of the unipolar-dominance school are being brought into sharp relief. The world is slowly coming into balance. Whether or not

this will be another period of great-power transition coupled with an increasing risk of war will largely depend on how America can navigate its decline. Policy makers must act responsibly in this new era or risk international

opposition that poses far greater costs and far greater dangers. A COHERENT grand strategy seeks to balance a state's economic resources and its foreign-policy commitments and to sustain that balance over time. For America, a coherent grand strategy also calls for rectifying the current imbalance between our means and our ends, adopting policies that enhance the former and modify the latter. Clearly, the United States is not the first great power to suffer long-term decline-we should learn from history. Great powers in decline seem to almost instinctively spend more on military forces in order to shore up their disintegrating strategic positions, and some like Germany go even further, shoring up their security by adopting preventive military strategies, beyond defensive alliances, to actively stop a rising competitor from becoming dominant. For declining great powers, the allure of preventive war-or lesser measures to "merely" firmly contain a rising power-has a more compelling logic than many might assume. Since Thucydides, scholars of international politics have famously argued that a declining hegemon and rising challenger must necessarily face such intense security competition that hegemonic

Gilpin, one of the deans of realism who taught for believed that "the first and most attractive response to a society's decline is to eliminate the source of the problem . . . [by] what we shall call a hegemonic war." Yet, waging war just to keep another state down has turned out to be one of the great losing strategies in history. The Napoleonic Wars, the Austro-Prussian War, the Franco-Prussian War, German aggression in World War I, and German and Japanese aggression in World War II were all driven by declining powers seeking to use war to improve their future security. All lost control of events they thought they could control. All suffered ugly defeats. All were worse-off than had they not attacked. As China rises, America must avoid this great-power trap. It would be easy to think that greater American military efforts could offset
war to retain dominance over the international system is almost a foregone conclusion. Robert decades at Princeton, the consequences of China's increasing power and possibly even lead to the formation of a multilateral strategy to contain China in the future. Indeed, when China's economic star began to rise in the 1990s, numerous voices called for precisely this, noting that on current trajectories China would overtake the United States as the world's leading economic power by 2050.8 Now, as that date draws nearer-indeed, current-dollar calculations put the crossover point closer to 2040-and with Beijing evermore dependent on imported oil for continued economic growth, one might think the case for actively containing China is all the stronger. Absent provocative military adventures by Beijing,

however, China's growth turns mainly on domestic issues-such as shifting the workforce from rural to urban areas-that are beyond the ability of outside powers to significantly influence.

U.S. military efforts to contain the rising power are most likely doomed to failure.

Although China's growth also depends on external sources of oil, there is no way to exploit this vulnerability short of obviously hostile alliances (with India, Indonesia, Taiwan and Japan) and clearly aggressive military measures (controlling the sea-lanes from the Persian Gulf to Asia) that together could deny oil to China. Any efforts along these lines would likely backfire-and only exacerbate America's problems, increasing the risk of counterbalancing. Even more insidious is the risk of overstretch. This self-reinforcing spiral escalates current spending to maintain increasingly costly military commitments, crowding out productive
investment for future growth. Today, the cold-war framework of significant troop deployments to Europe, Asia and the Persian Gulf is coming unglued. We cannot afford to keep our previous promises. With American forces bogged down in Iraq and Afghanistan and mounting troubles in Iran and Pakistan, the United States has all but gutted its military commitments to Europe, reducing our troop levels far below the one hundred thousand of the 1990s. Nearly half have been shifted to Iraq and elsewhere. Little wonder that Russia found an opportunity to demonstrate the hollowness of the Bush administration's plan for expanding NATO to Russia's borders by scoring a quick and decisive military victory over Georgia that America was helpless to prevent.

If a large-scale conventional war between China and Taiwan broke out in the near future, one must wonder whether America would significantly shift air and naval power away from its ongoing wars in the Middle East in order to live up to its global commitments. If the United States could not readily manage wars in Iraq and Afghanistan at the same time, could it really wage a protracted struggle in Asia as well? And as the gap between America's productive resources and global commitments grows, why will others pass up opportunities to take advantage of America's overstretched grand strategy? Since the end of the cold war, American leaders have consistently claimed the ability to maintain a significant forward-leaning military presence in the three major regions of the globe and, if necessary, to wage two major regional wars at the same time. The harsh reality is that the United States no longer has the economic capacity for such an ambitious grand strategy. With 30 percent of the world's product, the United States could imagine maintaining this hope. Nearing 20 percent, it cannot.

12

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACSea Lanes Advantage (5/7)


China will escalate the conflict perception of rational escalation ensures US gets drawn into the nuclear arms race
Glaser, PolSci Prof at George Washington, 11 (Charles, March/April, Will Chinas Rise Lead
to War? Foreign Affairs, Vol 90 Issue 2, EbscoHost)
ACCOMMODATION ON TAIWAN? THE PROSPECTS for avoiding intense military competition and war may be good, but growth in China's power may nevertheless require some changes in U.S. foreign policy that

Washington will find disagreeable--particularly regarding Taiwan. Although it lost control of Taiwan during the Chinese Civil War more than six decades ago, China still considers Taiwan to be part of its homeland, and unification remains a key political goal for Beijing. China has made clear that it will use force if Taiwan declares
independence, and much of China's conventional military buildup has been dedicated to increasing its ability to coerce Taiwan and reducing the United States' ability to intervene. Because China places such high value on Taiwan and because the United

States and China--whatever they might formally agree to--have such different attitudes regarding the legitimacy of the status quo, the issue poses special dangers and challenges for the U.S.-Chinese relationship, placing it in a different category than Japan or South Korea. A crisis over Taiwan could fairly easily escalate to nuclear war, because each step along the way might well seem rational to the actors involved.

Current U.S. policy is designed to reduce the probability that Taiwan will declare independence and to make clear that the United States will not come to Taiwan's aid if it does. Nevertheless, the United States would find itself under pressure to

protect Taiwan against any sort of attack, no matter how it originated. Given the different interests and perceptions of the various parties and the limited control Washington has over Taipei's behavior, a crisis could unfold in which the United States found itself following events rather than leading them. Such dangers have been around for decades, but ongoing improvements in China's military capabilities may make Beijing more willing to escalate a Taiwan crisis. In addition to its improved conventional capabilities, China is modernizing its nuclear forces to increase their ability to survive and retaliate following a large-scale U.S. attack. Standard deterrence theory holds that Washington's current ability to destroy most or all of China's nuclear force enhances its bargaining position. China's nuclear modernization might remove that check on Chinese action, leading Beijing to behave more boldly in future crises than it has in past ones. A U.S. attempt to preserve its ability to defend Taiwan, meanwhile, could fuel a conventional and nuclear arms race. Enhancements to U.S. offensive targeting capabilities and strategic ballistic
missile defenses might be interpreted by China as a signal of malign U.S. motives, leading to further Chinese military efforts and a general poisoning of U.S.-Chinese relations.

A protracted decline in the US economy will shred global economic resilience and lead to a complete breakdown of the world economy
Mandelbaum, Director of Foreign Policy Program at John Hopkins, 5 (Michael, The Case
for Goliath: How America Acts as the Worlds Government in the Twenty-First Century p 192195)
Although the spread of nuclear weapons, with the corresponding increase in the likelihood that a nuclear shot would be fired in anger somewhere in the world, counted as the most serious potential consequence of the abandonment by the United States of its role as the world's government, it was not the only one. In

the previous period of American international reticence, the 1920s and 1930s, the global economy suffered serious damage that a more active American role might have mitigated. A twenty-first-century American retreat could have similarly adverse international economic consequences. The economic collapse of the 1930s caused extensive hardship throughout the world and led indirectly to World War II by
appropriate fashion. Since

paving the way for the people who started it to gain power in Germany and Japan. In retrospect, the Great Depression is widely believed to have been caused by a series of errors in public policy that made an economic downturn far worse than it would have been had governments responded to it in

the 1930s, acting on the lessons drawn from that experience by professional economists, governments have taken steps that have helped to prevent a recurrence of the disasters of that decade.5 In the face of reduced demand, for example, governments have increased rather than cut spending. Fiscal and monetary crises have evoked rescue efforts rather than a studied indifference based on the assumption that market forces will readily reestablish a desirable economic equilibrium.

13

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACSea Lanes Advantage (6/7)


In contrast to the widespread practice of the 1930s, political authorities now understand that putting up barriers to imports in an attempt to revive domestic production will in fact worsen economic conditions everywhere. Still,

a serious, prolonged failure of the international economy, inflicting the kind of hardship the world experienced in the 1930s (which some Asian countries also suffered as a result of their fiscal crises in the 1990s) does not lie beyond the realm of possibility. Market economies remain subject to cyclical downturns, which public policy can limit but has not found a way to eliminate entirely. Markets also have an inherent tendency to form bubbles, excessive values for particular assets, whether seventeenth century Dutch tulips or twentieth century Japanese real estate and Thai currency, that cause economic harm when the bubble bursts and prices plunge. In responding to these events, governments can make errors. They can act too slowly, or fail to
implement the proper policies, or implement improper ones. Moreover, the global economy and the national economies that comprise it, like a living organism, change constantly and sometimes rapidly: Capital flows across sovereign borders, for instance, far more rapidly and in much greater volume in the early twenty-first century than ever before. This means that measures that successfully address economic malfunctions at one time may have less effect at another, just as medical science must cope with the appearance of new strains of influenza against which existing vaccines are not effective. Most importantly,

since the Great Depression, an active American international economic role has been crucial both in fortifying the conditions for global economic well-being and in coping with the problems that have occurred, especially periodic recessions and currency crises, by applying the lessons of the past. The absence of such a role could weaken those conditions and aggravate those problems. The overall American role in the world since World War II therefore has something in common with the theme of the Frank
learns that people he knows and loves turn out to be far worse off without him. So it is with the government. Without that role, the

Capra film It's a Wonderful Life, in which the angel Clarence, played by Henry Travers, shows James Stewart, playing the bank clerk George Bailey, who believes his existence to have been worthless, how life in his small town of Bedford Falls would have unfolded had he never been born. George Bailey

less prosperous place. The abdication by the United States of some or all of the responsibilities for international security that it had come to
bear in the first decade of the twenty-first century would deprive the international system of one of its principal safety features, which keeps countries from smashing into each other, as they are historically prone to do. In this sense, a

United States and its role as the world's world very likely would have been in the past, and would become a less secure and

world without America would be the equivalent of a freeway full of cars without brakes. Similarly, should the American government abandon some or all of the ways in which it had, at the dawn of the new century, come to support global economic activity, the world economy would function less effectively and might even suffer a severe and costly breakdown. A world without the United States would in this way resemble a fleet of cars without gasoline.

14

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACSea Lanes Advantage (7/7)


Thats the key internal link to escalation of regional wars makes every conflict go global
Friedberg, IR Professor at Princeton, 8 (Aaron, The Dangers of a Diminished America Wall
Street Journal) Then there are the dolorous consequences of a potential collapse of the world's financial architecture. For decades now, Americans have enjoyed the advantages of being at the center of that system. The worldwide use of the dollar, and the stability of our economy, among other things, made it easier for us to run huge budget deficits,
as we counted on foreigners to pick up the tab by buying dollar-denominated assets as a safe haven. Will this be possible in the future? Meanwhile,

traditional foreign-policy challenges are multiplying. The threat from al Qaeda and Islamic terrorist affiliates has not been extinguished. Iran and North Korea are continuing on their bellicose paths, while Pakistan and Afghanistan are progressing smartly down the road to chaos. Russia's new militancy and China's seemingly relentless rise also give cause for concern. If America now tries to pull back from the world stage, it will leave a dangerous power vacuum. The stabilizing effects of our presence in Asia, our continuing commitment to Europe, and our position as defender of last resort for Middle East energy sources and supply lines could all be placed at risk. In such a scenario there are shades of the 1930s, when global trade and finance ground nearly to a halt, the peaceful democracies failed to cooperate, and aggressive powers led by the remorseless fanatics who rose up on the crest of economic disaster exploited their divisions. Today we run the risk that rogue states may choose to become ever more reckless with their nuclear toys, just at our moment of maximum vulnerability. The aftershocks of the financial crisis will almost certainly rock our principal strategic competitors even harder than they will rock us. The dramatic free fall of the Russian stock market has demonstrated the fragility of a state whose economic performance hinges on high oil prices, now driven down by the global slowdown. China is perhaps even more fragile, its economic growth depending heavily on foreign investment and access to foreign markets. Both will now be constricted, inflicting economic pain and perhaps even sparking unrest in a country where political legitimacy rests on progress in the long march to prosperity. None of this is good news if the authoritarian leaders of these countries seek to divert attention from internal travails with external adventures. As for our democratic friends, the present crisis comes when many European nations are struggling to deal with decades of anemic growth, sclerotic governance and an impending demographic crisis. Despite its past dynamism, Japan faces similar challenges. India is still in the early stages of its emergence as a world economic and geopolitical power. What does this all mean? There is no substitute for America on the world stage. The choice we have before us is between the potentially disastrous effects of disengagement and the stiff price tag of continued American leadership.

15

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACScience Leadership Advantage (1/8)


Advantage 3 is science leadership

Scenario 1 Warming Warming is real and anthropogenicmodels and scientific consensus are on our side
Rahmstorf 8 (Richard. Professor of Physics of the Oceans at Potsdam University. Global
Warming: Looking Beyond Kyoto. Edited by Ernesto Zedillo. Anthropogenic Climate Change? Page 42-49) It is time to turn to statement B: human activities are altering the climate. This can be broken into two parts. The first is as follows: global climate is warming. This is by now a generally undisputed point (except by novelist Michael Crichton), so we deal with it only briefly. The two leading compilations of data measured with thermometers are shown in figure 3-3, that of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and that of the British Hadley Centre for Climate Change. Although they differ in the details, due to the inclusion of different data sets and use of different spatial averaging and quality control procedures, they both show a consistent picture, with a global mean warming of 0.8 C since the late
trend due to the occurrence of a major

nineteenth century. Temperatures over the past ten years clearly were the warmest since measured records have been available. The year 1998 sticks out well above the longterm

El Nino event that year (the last El Nino so far and one of the strongest on record). These events are examples of the largest natural climate variations on multiyear time scales and, by releasing heat from the ocean, generally cause positive anomalies in global mean temperature. It is remarkable that the year 2005 rivaled the heat of 1998

even though no El Nino event occurred that year. (A bizarre curiosity, perhaps worth mentioning, is that several prominent "climate skeptics" recently used the extreme year 1998 to claim in the media that global warming had ended. In Lindzen's words, "Indeed, the absence of any record breakers during the past seven years is statistical evidence that temperatures are not increasing.")33 In addition to the surface measurements, the more recent portion of the global warming trend (since 1979) is also documented by satellite data. It is not straightforward to derive a reliable surface temperature trend from satellites, as they measure radiation coming from throughout the atmosphere (not just near the surface), including the stratosphere, which has strongly cooled, and the records are not homogeneous' due to the short life span of individual satellites, the problem of

Current analyses of these satellite data show trends that are fully consistent with surface measurements and model simulations." If no reliable temperature measurements existed, could we be sure that the climate is warming? The "canaries in the coal mine" of climate change (as glaciologist Lonnie Thompson puts it) ~are mountain glaciers. We know, both from old photographs and from the position of the terminal moraines heaped up by the flowing ice, that mountain glaciers have been in retreat all over the world during the past century. There are precious few exceptions, and they are associated with a strong increase in precipitation or local cooling.36 I have
orbital decay, observations at different times of day, and drifts in instrument calibration.' inspected examples of shrinking glaciers myself in field trips to Switzerland, Norway, and New Zealand. As glaciers respond sensitively to temperature changes, data on the extent of glaciers have been used to reconstruct a history of Northern Hemisphere temperature over the past four centuries (see figure 3-4). Cores drilled in tropical glaciers show signs of recent melting that is unprecedented at least throughout the Holocene-the past 10,000 years. visible clearly from satellites,

Another powerful sign of warming, is the shrinking Arctic sea ice cover (figure 3-5), which has declined 20 percent since satellite observations began in 1979. While climate clearly became warmer in the twentieth century, much discussion particularly in the popular media has focused on the
question of how "unusual" this warming is in a longer-term context. While this is an interesting question, it has often been mixed incorrectly with the question of causation. Scientifically, how unusual recent warming is-say, compared to the past millennium-in itself contains little information about its cause. Even a highly unusual warming could have a natural cause (for example, an exceptional increase in solar activity). And

even a warming within the bounds of past natural variations could have a predominantly anthropogenic cause. I come to the question of causation shortly, after briefly visiting

the evidence for past natural climate variations. Records from the time before systematic temperature measurements were collected are based on "proxy data," coming from tree rings, ice cores, corals, and other sources. These proxy data are generally linked to local temperatures in some way, but they may be influenced by other parameters as well (for example, precipitation), they may have a seasonal bias (for example, the growth season for tree rings), and high-quality long records are difficult to obtain and therefore few in number and geographic coverage. Therefore, there is still substantial uncertainty in the evolution of past global or hemispheric temperatures. (Comparing only local or regional temperature; as in Europe, is of limited value for our purposes,' as regional variations can be much larger than global ones and can have many regional causes, unrelated to global-scale forcing and climate change.) The first quantitative reconstruction for the Northern Hemisphere temperature of the past millennium, including an error estimation, was presented by Mann, Bradley, and Hughes and rightly highlighted in the 2001 IPCC report as one of the major new findings since its 1995 report; it is shown in figure 3_6.39

twentieth-century warming is indeed highly unusual and probably was unprecedented during the past millennium. This result, presumably because of its symbolic power, has attracted much criticism, to
The analysis suggests that, despite the large error bars, some extent in scientific journals, but even more so in the popular media. The hockey stick-shaped curve became a symbol for the IPCC, .and criticizing this particular data analysis became an avenue for some to question the credibility of the IPCC. Three important things have been overlooked in much of the media coverage. First, even if the scientific critics had been right, this would not have called into question the very cautious conclusion drawn by the IPCC from the reconstruction by Mann, Bradley, and Hughes: "New analyses of proxy data for the Northern Hemisphere indicate that the increase in temperature in the twentieth century is likely to have been the largest of any century during the past 1,000 years

." This conclusion has since been supported further by every single one of close to a dozen new reconstructions (two of which are shown in figure 3-6). Second, by far the most serious scientific criticism raised against Mann, Hughes, and If their analysis underestimated past natural climate variability, this would certainly not argue for a smaller climate sensitivity and thus a lesser concern about the consequences of our emissions.
accurate or not has no bearing on policy.

Bradley was simply based on a mistake. 40 The prominent paper of von Storch and others, which claimed (based on a model test) that the method of Mann, Bradley, and Hughes systematically underestimated variability, "was [itself] based on incorrect implementation of the reconstruction procedure."41 With correct implementation, climate field reconstruction procedures such as the one used by Mann, Bradley, and Hughes have been shown to perform well in similar model tests. Third, whether their reconstruction is

16

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACScience Leadership Advantage (2/8)


Some have argued that, in contrast, it would point to a larger climate sensitivity. While this is a valid point in principle, it does not apply in practice to the climate sensitivity estimates discussed herein or to the range given by IPCC, since these did not use the reconstruction of Mann, Hughes, and Bradley or any other proxy records of the past millennium. Media claims that "a pillar of the Kyoto Protocol" had been called into question were therefore misinformed. As an aside, the protocol was agreed in 1997, before the reconstruction in question even existed. The overheated public debate on this topic has, at least, helped to attract more researchers and funding to this area of paleoclimatology; its methodology has advanced significantly, and a number of new reconstructions have been presented in recent years. While the science has moved forward, the first seminal reconstruction by Mann, Hughes, and Bradley has held up remarkably well, with its main features reproduced by morerecent work. Further progress probably will require substantial amounts of new proxy data, rather than further refinement of the statistical techniques pioneered by Mann, Hughes, and Bradley. Developing these data sets will

most of the observed warming over the past fifty years is anthropogenic. A large number of studies exist that have taken different approaches to analyze this issue, which is generally called the "attribution problem." I do not discuss the exact share of the anthropogenic contribution (although this is an interesting question). By "most" I imply mean "more than 50 percent. The first and crucial piece of evidence is, of course, that the magnitude of the warming is what is expected from the anthropogenic perturbation of the radiation balance, so anthropogenic forcing is able to explain all of the temperature rise. As discussed here, the rise in greenhouse gases alone corresponds to 2.6 W/tn2 of forcing. This by itself, after
require time and substantial effort. It is time to address the final statement: explain most of the warming

subtraction of the observed 0'.6 W/m2 of ocean heat uptake, would Cause 1.6C of warming since preindustrial times for medium climate sensitivity (3"C). With a current "best guess'; aerosol forcing of 1 W/m2, the expected warming is O.8c. The point here is not that it is possible to obtain the 'exact observed number-this is fortuitous because the amount of aerosol' forcing is still very' uncertain-but that the expected magnitude is roughly right. There can be little doubt that the anthropogenic forcing is large enough to

. Depending on aerosol forcing and climate sensitivity, it could explain a large fraction of the warming, or all of it, or even more warming than has been observed (leaving room for natural processes to counteract some of the warming). The second important piece of evidence is clear: there is no viable alternative explanation. In the scientific literature, no serious alternative hypothesis has been proposed to explain the observed global warming. Other possible causes, such as solar activity, volcanic activity, cosmic rays, or orbital cycles, are well observed, but they do not show trends capable of explaining the observed warming. Since 1978, solar irradiance has been measured directly from satellites
and shows the well-known eleven-year solar cycle, but no trend. There are various estimates of solar variability before this time, based on sunspot numbers, solar cycle length, the geomagnetic AA index, neutron monitor data, and, carbon-14 data. These indicate that solar activity probably increased somewhat up to 1940. While there is disagreement about the variation in previous centuries, different authors agree that solar activity did not significantly increase during the last sixty-five years. Therefore, this cannot explain the warming, and neither can any of the other factors mentioned. Models driven by natural factors only, leaving the anthropogenic forcing aside, show a cooling in the second half of the twentieth century (for an example, See figure 2-2, panel a, in chapter 2 of this volume). The trend in the sum of natural forcings is downward. The only way out would

some as yet undiscovered unknown forcing or a warming trend that arises by chance from an unforced internal has to be considered highly unlikely. No evidence in the observed record, proxy data, or current models suggest that such internal variability could cause a sustained trend of global warming of the observed magnitude. As discussed, twentieth century warming is unprecedented over the
be either variability in the climate system. The latter cannot be completely ruled out, but

past 1,000 years (or even 2,000 years, as the few longer reconstructions available now suggest), which does not 'support the idea of large internal fluctuations. Also, those past variations correlate well with past forcing (solar variability, volcanic activity) and thus appear to be largely forced rather than due to unforced internal variability." And indeed, it would be difficult for a large and sustained unforced variability to satisfy the fundamental physical law of energy conservation. Natural internal variability generally shifts heat around different parts of the climate system-for example, the large El Nino event of 1998, which warmed, the atmosphere by releasing heat stored in the ocean. This mechanism implies that the ocean heat content drops as the atmosphere warms. For past decades, as discussed, we observed the atmosphere warming and the ocean heat content increasing, which rules out heat release from the ocean as a cause of surface warming. The heat content of the whole climate system is increasing, and there is no plausible source of this heat other than the heat trapped by greenhouse gases. ' A completely different approach to attribution is to analyze the spatial patterns of climate change. This is done in so-called fingerprint studies, which associate particular patterns or "fingerprints" with different forcings. It is plausible that the pattern of a solar-forced climate change differs from the pattern of a change caused by greenhouse gases. For example, a characteristic of greenhouse gases is that heat is trapped closer to the Earth's surface and that, unlike solar variability, greenhouse gases tend to warm more in winter, and at night. Such studies have used different data sets and have been performed by different groups of researchers with different statistical methods. They consistently conclude that the observed spatial pattern of warming can only be explained by greenhouse gases.49 Overall, it has to be considered, highly likely' that the observed warming is indeed predominantly due to the human-caused increase in greenhouse gases. ' This paper discussed the evidence for the anthropogenic increase in atmospheric CO2 concentration and the effect of CO2 on climate, finding that this anthropogenic increase is proven beyond

mass of evidence points to a CO2 effect on climate of 3C 1.59C global-warming for a doubling of concentration. (This is, the classic IPCC range; my personal assessment is that, in-the light of new studies since the IPCC Third Assessment Report, the uncertainty range can now be narrowed somewhat to 3C 1.0C) This is based on consistent results from theory, models, and data analysis, and, even in the absence-of any computer models, the same result would still hold based on physics and on data from climate history alone. Considering the plethora of consistent evidence,
reasonable doubt and that a

the chance that these conclusions are wrong has to be considered minute. If the preceding is accepted, then it follows logically and incontrovertibly that a further increase in CO2 concentration will lead to further warming. The magnitude of our emissions depends on human behavior, but the climatic response to various emissions scenarios can be computed from the information presented here. The result is the famous range of future global temperature scenarios shown in figure 3_6.50 Two additional steps are involved in these computations: the consideration of anthropogenic forcings other than CO2 (for example, other greenhouse gases and aerosols) and the computation of concentrations

CO2 is the largest and most important forcing. Concerning concentrations, the scenarios shown basically assume that ocean and biosphere take up a similar share of our emitted CO2 as in the past. This could turn out to be an optimistic assumption; some models indicate the possibility of a positive feedback, with the biosphere turning into a carbon source rather than a sink under growing climatic stress. It is clear that even in the more optimistic of the shown (non-mitigation) scenarios, global temperature would rise by 2-3C above its preindustrial level by the end of this century. Even for a paleoclimatologist like
from the emissions. Other gases are not discussed here, although they are important to get quantitatively accurate results.

myself, this is an extraordinarily high temperature, which is very likely unprecedented in at least the past 100,000 years. As far as the data show, we would have to go back about 3 million years, to the Pliocene, for comparable temperatures. The rate of this warming (which is important for the ability of ecosystems to cope) is also highly unusual and unprecedented probably for an even longer time. The last major global warming trend occurred when the last great Ice Age ended between 15,000 and 10,000 years ago: this was a warming of about 5C over 5,000 years, that is, a rate of only 0.1 C per century. 52

17

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACScience Leadership Advantage (3/8)


The expected magnitude and rate of planetary warming is highly likely to come with major risk and impacts in terms of sea level rise (Pliocene sea level was 25-35 meters higher than now due to smaller Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets), extreme events (for example, hurricane activity is expected to increase in a warmer climate), and ecosystem loss. The second part of this paper
examined the evidence for the current warming of the planet and discussed what is known about its causes. This part showed that global warming is already a measured andwell-established fact, not a theory. Many different lines of evidence consistently show that most of the observed warming of the past fifty years was caused by human activity. Above all, this warming is exactly what would be expected given the anthropogenic rise in greenhouse gases, and no viable alternative explanation for this warming has been proposed in the scientific literature. Taken together.,

the very strong evidence accumulated from thousands of independent studies, has over the past decades convinced virtually every climatologist around the world (many of whom were initially quite skeptical, including myself) that anthropogenic global warming is a reality with which we need to deal.

Ice breakers are needed for continued polar research allows key access for resupplying and scientists
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World:An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) The health and continued vitality of polar research are intimately linked to the availability of the appropriate infrastructure and logistical support to allow scientists to work in these harsh environments. Access to the polar regions is essential if the United States is to continue to be a leader in polar science. To operate reliably and safely in these regions necessitates a national icebreaking capability. Icebreakers enable resupply of land-based stations and field camps in the south. The availability of polar icebreakers with greater icebreaking capability would enable important new research in
the Southern Ocean in locations where ice is thick. While other assets and platforms such as airplanes and space borne sensors are useful tools, surface ground-truth and in situ sampling will not be replaced in the near future. Because there are no land

sites in the central Arctic, an icebreaker is an essential platform to support sustained scientific measurements in the Arctic Ocean. The availability of adequate icebreaking capabilities will be essential to advancing research in both polar regions.

Polar Research is pivotal to create a societal concern and scientific initiative necessary to solve global warming
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World:An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) Because science and engineering research in the polar regions is critical to U.S. national interests, its relevance and impact continue to increase. The Arctic and Antarctic provide natural laboratories where extreme environments and geographically unique settings enable research on fundamental phenomena and processes not feasible or possible elsewhere (NSF, 2005). Significant advances
in many scientific disciplines and engineering applications have resulted from polar research and many of these discoveries have provided critical knowledge of direct benefit to society (Box 4.1).

As global climate has garnered worldwide attention, the polar regions have been found to react acutely to fluctuations in climate and temperature. Since ice tends to

reflect solar radiation and water absorbs it, melting in the polar regions can exert a strong influence on both atmospheric climate and ocean circulation .

Huge reservoirs of water are held in massive ice sheets and glaciers; substantial release may create major climate and social dislocations. Thus, research in these regions plays a pivotal role in the global Earth system exerting influences of critical importance. The 40 percent reduction in Arctic sea-ice
thickness over the past four decades and the collapse of ice shelves in West Antarctica are some of the most dramatic examples of recent changes that have captured the publics imagination. In

many ways, these events have come to represent societal concerns about human influence on Earths climate. From a scientific standpoint, evidence continues to accumulate that not only are the polar regions an important focus of research as unique systems, but they also play a pivotal role in global Earth systems.

18

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACScience Leadership Advantage (4/8)


Warming magnifies every impact and causes extinction
Burke 8 (Sharon, sr fellow and dir of the energy security project at the Center for a New
American Security, Chapter 6 of Climatic Cataclysm: The Foreign Policy and National Security Implications of Climate Change, edited by Kurt Campbell, p 157-165) At the same time, however, the implications of both trends for human society and survival raise the stakes; it is crucial to try to
catastrophic scenario,

understand what the future might look like in one hundred years in order to act accordingly today. This scenario, therefore, builds a picture of the plausible effects of catastrophic climate change, and the implications for national security, on the basis of what we know about the past and the present. The purpose is not to "one up" the previous scenarios in awfulness, but rather to attempt to imagine the unimaginable future that is, after all, entirely plausible. Assumed Climate Effects of the Catastrophic Scenario. In the

the year 2040 marks an important tipping point. Large-scale, singular events of abrupt climate change will start occurring, greatly exacerbated by the collapse of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (MOC), which is believed to play and important role in regulating global climate, particularly in Europe.8 There will be a rapid loss of polar ice, a sudden rise in sea levels, totaling 2 meters (6.6 feet), and a temperature increase of almost 5.6C (10.1F) by 2095. Developing countries, particularly those at low latitudes and those reliant on subsistence, rain-fed farming, will be hardest and earliest hit.

All nations, however, will find it difficult to deal with the unpredictable, abrupt, and severe nature of climate change after 2040. These changes will be difficult to anticipate, and equally difficult to mitigate or recover from, particularly as they will recur, possibly on a frequent basis. First, the rise in temperatures alone will present a fundamental challenge for human health. Indeed, even now, about 250 people die of heatstroke every year in the United States. In a prolonged heat wave in 1980, more than 10,000 people died of heat-related illnesses, and between 5,000 and 10,00 in 1988.9 In 2003, record heat waves in Europe, with temperatures in Paris hitting 40.4C (104.7F) and 47.3C (116.3F) in parts of Portugal, are estimated to have cost more than 37,000 lives; in the same summer there were at least 2,000 heat-related deaths in India. Average temperatures will increase in most regions, and the western United States, southern Europe, and southern Australia will be particularly vulnerable to prolonged heat spells. The rise in temperatures will complicated daily life around the world. In Washington, D.C., the average summer temperature is in the low 30s C (high 80s F), getting as high as 40C (104F). With a 5.6C (10.1F) increase, that could mean temperatures as high as 45.6C (114.5F). In New Delhi, summer temperatures can reach 45C (113F) already, opening the possibility of new highs approaching sO.sOC (123F). In general, the level of safe exposure is considered to be about 38C (lOOF); at hotter temperatures, activity has to be

Sudden shifts in temperature, which are expected in this scenario, are particularly lethal. As a result of higher temperatures and lower, unpredictable precipitation, severe and persistent wildfires will become more common, freshwater will be more scarce, and agricultural productivity will fall, particularly in Southern Europe and the Mediterranean, and the western United States. The World Health Organization estimates that water scarcity already affects two- fifths of the world population-s-some 2.6 billion people. In this scenario, half the world population will experience persistent water scarcity. Regions that depend on annual snowfall and glaciers for water lose their supply; hardest hit will be Central Asia, the Andes, Europe, and western North America. Some regions may become uninhabitable due to lack of water: the Mediterranean, much
limited and the very old and the very young are especially vulnerable to heat-related illness and mortality. of Central Asia, northern Mexico, and South America. The southwestern United States will lose its current sources of fresh water, but that may be mitigated by an increase in precipitation due to the MOC collapse, though precipitation patterns may be irregular. Regional water scarcity will also be mitigated by increases in precipitation in East Africa and East and Southeast Asia, though the risk of floods will increase.

The lack of rainfall will also threaten tropical forests and their dependent species with extinction. Declining agricultural productivity will be an acute challenge. The heat, together with shifting and unpredictable precipitation patterns and melting glaciers, will dry out many areas, including today's grain-exporting regions. The largest decreases in precipitation will be in North Africa, the Middle East, Cen tral America, the Caribbean, and
northeastern South America, including Amazonia. The World Food Program estimates that nearly 1 billion people suffer from chronic hunger today, almost 15 million of them refugees from conflict and natural disasters. According to the World Food Program, "More than nine out of ten of those who die I of chronic hunger] are simply trapped by

Mortality rates from hunger and lack of water will skyrocket over the next century, and given all that wiII be happening, that will probably not make the news, either--people will just die. Over the next one
poverty in remote rural areas or urban slums. They do not make the news. They just die." hundred years, the "breadbasket" regions of the world will shift northward. Consequently, formerly subarctic regions will be able to support farming, but these regions' traditionally small human populations and lack of infrastructure, including roads and utilities, will make the dramatic expansion of agriculture a challenge. Moreover,

extreme year-to-year climate variability may make sustainable agriculture unlikely, at least on the scale
At the same time that the resource base to support humanity is shrinking, there will be less inhabitable land.

needed. Northwestern Europe, too, will see shorter growing seasons and declining crop yields because it will actually experience colder winters, due to the collapse of the MOC.

Ten percent of the world population now lives in low-elevation coastal zones (all land contiguous with the coast that is 10 meters or less in elevation) that will experience sea level rises of 6.6 feet (2 meters) in this scenario and 9.8 feet (3 meters) in the North Atlantic, given the loss of the MOC. Most major cities at or near sea level have some kind of flood protection, so high tides alone will not lead to the inundation of these cities. Consider, however, that the combined effects of more frequent and severe weather events and higher sea levels could well lead to increased flooding from coastal storms and coastal erosion. In any case, there will be saltwater intrusion into coastal water supplies, rising water tables, and the loss of coastal and upstream wetlands, with impacts on fisheries. The rise could well occur in several quick pulses, with relatively stable periods in between, which will complicate planning and adaptation and make any kind of orderly or managed evacuation unlikely. Inundation plus the combined effects of higher sea levels and more frequent tropical storms may leave many large coastal cities uninhabitable, including the largest American cities, New York City and Los Angeles, focal points for the national economy with a combined total of almost 33 million people in their metropolitan areas
today. Resettling coastal populations will be a crippling challenge, even for the United States. Sea level rises also will affect food security. Significant fertile deltas will become largely uncultivable because of inundation and more frequent and higher storm surges that reach farther inland

19

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACScience Leadership Advantage (5/8)


Fisheries and marine ecosystems, particularly in the North Atlantic, will collapse. Locally devastating weather events will be the new norm for coastal and mid-latitude locations-wind and flood damage will be much more intense. There will be frequent losses of life, property, and infrastructure-and this will happen every year. Although water scarcity and food security will disproportionately affect poor
countries-they already do-extreme weather events will be more or less evenly distributed around the world. Regions affected by tropical storms, including typhoons and hurricanes, will include all three coasts of the United States; all of Mexico and Central America; the Caribbean islands; East, Southeast and South Asia; and many South Pacific and Indian Ocean islands. Recent isolated events when coastal storms made landfall in the South Atlantic, Europe, and the Arabian Sea in the last few years suggest that these regions will also experience a rise in the incidence of extreme storms. In these circumstances, there will be an across-the-board decline in human development indicators. Life spans will shorten, incomes will drop, health will deteriorate-including as a result of proliferating diseases-infant mortality will rise, and

there will be a decline in personal freedoms as states fall to anocracy (a situation where central authority in a state is weak or nonexistent and power has devolved to more regional or local actors, such as tribes) and autocracy. The Age of Survival: Imagining the Unimaginable Future If

New Orleans is one harbinger of the future, Somalia is another. With a weak and barely functional central government that does not enjoy the trust and confidence of the public, the nation has descended into clan warfare. Mortality rates for combatants and noncombatants are high. Neighboring Ethiopia has intervened, with troops on the ground in Mogadishu and elsewhere, a small African Union peacekeeping force is present in the country, and the United States has conducted military missions in Somalia within the last year, including air strikes aimed at terrorist groups that the United States government has said are finding safe haven in the chaos." In a July 2007 report, the UN Monitoring Group on Somalia reported that the nation is "literally awash in arms" and factional groups are targeting not only all combatants in the country but also noncombatants, including aid groups. Drought is a regular feature of life in Somalia that even in the best of times has been difficult to deal with. These are bad times, indeed, for Somalia, and the mutually reinforcing cycle of drought, famine, and conflict has left some 750,000 Somalis internally displaced and about 1.5 million people-17 percent of the population-in dire need of humanitarian relief. The relief is difficult to provide, however, given the lawlessness and violence consuming the country. For example, nearly all food assistance to Somalia is shipped by sea, but with the rise of piracy, the number of vessels willing to carry food to the country fell by 50 percent in 2007.u Life expectancy is forty-eight years, infant mortality has skyrocketed, and annual per capita GDP is estimated to be about six hundred dollars. The conflict has also had a negative effect on the stability of

there will be a sharp rise in failing and failed states and therefore in intrastate war. According to International Alert, there are forty-six countries, home to 2,7 billion people, at a high risk of violent conflict as a result of climate change. The group lists an additional fifty-six nations, accounting for another 1.2 billion people, that will have difficulty dealing with climate change, given other challenges. 12 Over the next hundred years, in a catastrophic future, that means there are likely to be at least 102 failing and failed states, consumed by internal conflict, spewing desperate refugees, and harboring and spawning violent extremist movements. Moreover, nations all over the world will be destabilized as a result, either by the crisis on their borders or the significant numbers of refugees and in some cases armed or extremist groups migrating into their territories. Over the course of the century, this will mean a collapse of globalization and transnational institutions and an increase in all types of conflictmost dramatically, intrastate and asymmetric. The global nature of the conflicts and the abruptness of the climate effects will challenge the ability of governments all over the world to respond to the disasters, mitigate the effects, or to contain the violence along their borders. There will be civil unrest in every nation as a result of popular anger toward governments, scapegoating of migrant and minority populations, and a rise in charismatic end-of-days cults, which will deepen a sense of hopelessness as these cults tend to see no end to misery other than extinction followed by divine salvation. Given that the failing nations account for half of the global population, this will also be a cataclysmic humanitarian disaster, with hundreds of millions of people dying from climate effects and conflict, totally
surrounding nations. In the catastrophic climate change scenario, situations like that in Somalia will be commonplace: overwhelming the ability of international institutions and donor nations to respond. This failure of the international relief system will be total after 2040 as donor nations are forced to turn their resources inward.

There will be a worldwide economic depression and a reverse in the gains in standards of living made in the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. At the same time, the probability of conflict between nations will rise. Although global interstate resource wars are generally unlikely;" simmering conflicts between nations, such as that between India and Pakistan, are likely to boil over, particularly if both nations are failing. Both India and Pakistan, of course, have nuclear weapons, and a nuclear exchange is possible, perhaps likely, either by failing central governments or by extremist and ethnic groups that seize control of nuclear weapons. There will also be competition for the Arctic region , where natural
resources, including oil and arable land, will be increasingly accessible and borders are ill defined. It is possible that agreements over Arctic territories will be worked out among Russia, Canada, Norway, the United States, Iceland, and Denmark in the next two decades, before the truly catastrophic climate effects manifest themselves in those nations. If not, possibly . In general, though, nations will be preoccupied with maintaining internal stability and will have difficulty mustering the resources for war. Indeed, the greater danger is that states will fail to muster the resources for interstate cooperation. Finally, all nations are likely to experience violent conflict as a result of migration patterns. There will be increasingly few arable parts of the world, and few nations able to respond to climate change effects, and hundreds of millions of desperate people looking for a safe haven-a volatile mix. This will cause considerable unrest in the United States, Canada, Europe, and Russia, and will likely involve inhumane border control practices. Imagining what this will actually mean at a

there is a strong probability of conflict over the Arctic,

even armed conflict

coastal cities in hurricane alley along the Gulf Coast will have to be abandoned, possibly as soon as the first half of the century, certainly by the end of the century. New Orleans will obviously be first, but Pascagoula and Bay St. Louis,
national level is disheartening. For the United States, Mississippi, and Houston and Beaumont, Texas, and other cities will be close behind. After the first couple of episodes of flooding and destructive winds, starting with Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005, the cities will be partially rebuilt;

the third major incident will make it clear that the risk of renewed destruction is too high to justify the cost of reconstruction. The abandonment of oil and natural gas production facilities in the Gulf region will push the United States into a severe recession or even depression, probably before the abrupt climate effects take hold in 2040. Mexico's economy will be devastated, which will increase illegal immigration into the United States.

20

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACScience Leadership Advantage (6/8)


major U.S. cities are likely to become uninhabitable after 2040, including New York City and Los Angeles, with a combined metropolitan population of nearly 33 million people. Resettling these populations will be a massive challenge that will preoccupy the
Other United States, cause tremendous popular strife, and absorb all monies, including private donations, which would have previously gone to foreign aid. The United States, Canada,

, this will provoke a deep, persistent economic crisis. Standards of living across the United States will fall dramatically, which will provoke civil unrest across the country. The imposition of martial law is a possibility. Though the poor and middle class will be hit the hardest, no one will
China, Europe, and Japan will have little choice but to become aggressively isolationist, with militarized borders. Given how dependent all these nations are on global trade be immune. The fact that wealthier Americans will be able to manage the effects better, however, will certainly provoke resentment and probably violence and higher crime rates. Gated communities are likely to be commonplace. Finally,

the level of popular anger toward the United States, as the leading historical contributor to climate change, will be astronomical. There will be an increase in asymmetric attacks on the American homeland. India will cease to function as a nation, but before this occurs, Pakistan and Bangladesh will implode and help spur India's demise. This implosion will start with prolonged regional heat waves, which will quietly kill hundreds of thousands of people. It will not immediately be apparent that these are climate change casualties. Massive agricultural losses late in the first half of the century, along with the collapse of fisheries as a result of sea level rise, rising oceanic temperatures, and hypoxic conditions, will put the entire region into a food emergency. At first, the United States, Australia, China, New Zealand, and the
increasingly violent areas, and then, as donations dry up, will cease operations.

Nordic nations will be able to coordinate emergency food aid and work with Indian scientists to introduce drought- and saltwater-resistant plant species. Millions of lives will be saved, and India will be stabilized for a time. But a succession of crippling droughts and heat waves in all of the donor nations and the inundation of several populous coastal cities will force these nations to concentrate on helping their own populations. The World Food Program and other international aid agencies will first have trouble operating in

Existing internal tensions in India will explode in the latter half of the century, as hundreds of millions of starving people begin to move, trying to find a way to survive. As noted above, a nuclear exchange between either the national governments or subnational groups in the region is possible and perhaps even likely. By mid-century, communal genocide will rage unchecked in several African states, most notably Sudan and Senegal, where agriculture will completely collapse and the populations will depend on food imports. Both nations will be covered with ghost towns, where entire populations have either perished or fled; this will increasingly be true across Africa, South Asia, Central Asia, Central America, the Caribbean, South America, and Southeast Asia. Europe will have the oddity of having to deal with far colder winters, given the collapse of the MOC, which will
compromise agricultural productivity.

Scenario 2 Oil Spills Current capabilities cant solve for Arctic spills US cant get access to spills quickly enough to effectively clean up
Kroh et al, 12. Kiley Kroh, Associate Director for Ocean Communications at the Center for
American Progress, Michael Conathan, Director of Ocean Policy at the Center for American Progress, and Emma Huvos, February 2012. Putting a Freeze on Arctic Ocean Drilling. Center for American Progress. http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2012/02/pdf/arcticreport.pdf Obviously the Beaufort Sea and Chukchi Sealocated on the edge of the Arctic Oceanare home to weather conditions that differ dramatically from the Gulf of Mexico. As the commissions final report illustrated, The Alaskan Arctic is characterized by extreme cold, extended seasons of darkness, hurricanestrength storms, and pervasive fogall affecting access and working conditions. The Chukchi and the
realities of the Arctic | www.americanprogress.org 13 Beaufort Seas are covered by varying forms of ice for eight to nine months a year. These conditions limit exploratory drilling and many other activities to the summer months.

The icy conditions during the rest of the year pose severe challenges for oil and gas operations and scientific research. And oil spill response efforts are complicated year-round by the remote location and the presence of ice, at all phases of exploration and possible production.

21

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACScience Leadership Advantage (7/8)


Icebreakers are key to mitigating oil spills opening up sea lanes allows for rapid response times
Sullivan 2/27/12. John A. Sullivan, news editor for
Meanwhile,

Oil and Gas Investor. Coast Guard Muscles Up Arctic Presence in Advance of Drilling. Natural Gas Week. Lexis. http://www.lexisnexis.com/lnacui2api/returnTo.do?returnToKey=20_T15105743963

a Center for American Progress report, written by Kiley Kroh, Michael Conathan and Emma Huvos, highlights glaring deficiencies in coordinating a response to a minor spill, much less one approaching the Macondo disaster. The key problem in mounting a spill response in the Arctic is that the region lacks airports, rail lines, highways, deepwater ports and, oddly enough, icebreakers. In April 2010, first-line responders to the Macondo disaster could count on immediate access to 3,217 ports as well as 95 airports
with runways 8,000 feet or longer and another 442 with runways 5,000 feet or longer. In a 500-mile radius of Shell's planned drilling in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas, there are four airports with runways 8,000 feet or longer; 13 airports with runways 5,000 feet or longer; five equipment staging areas for spill response cooperatives and no permanent US Coast Guard facilities or major public ports. The report also notes that efforts have been made to station response teams and equipment in the Arctic. Founded in

. The cooperative has a large amount of equipment and trained personnel ready to respond -- but not in the dead of winter when temperature can drop well below zero, effectively neutralizing any chemical dispersants now in use. Looking at conditions, it would seem that Mother Nature is also siding with
1979, Alaska Clean Seas runs an emergency operations center in Deadhorse, Alaska

those opposed to drilling above the Arctic Circle. During May 2010, the first full month of the Macondo spill, the average temperature was 80.2 degrees Fahrenheit with winds of about 7.8 mph and there were 13 hours of daylight. All of that changes in the Arctic, where the weather "is characterized by extreme cold, extended seasons of darkness, hurricane-strength storms and pervasive fog -- all affecting access and working conditions." During October, there may only be a few hours of daylight in the Arctic -- cutting the

. Just to reach the scene of an accident would require the use of icebreakers The US has two -- and both are currently sidelined; the Russians have 20 with seven of them being nuclear powered; and China has one with a second one being built. Other nations such as South Korea, Japan, Brazil, Sweden and Norway have also invested in icebreakers.
effectiveness of any airborne response -- specially designed vessels with reinforced bows and the power to break their way through ice.

Arctic oil spills would devastate the local ecosystem


Kollewe and Macalister 4/11/12. Julia Kollewe and Terry Macalister. Arctic oil rush will
ruin ecosystem, warns Lloyd's of London. The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/apr/12/lloyds-london-warns-risks-arctic-oil-drilling But the new report from Lloyd's, written by Charles Emmerson and Glada Lahn of Chatham House, says it is "highly likely" that future economic activity in the Arctic will further disturb ecosystems already stressed by the consequences of climate change. "Migration patterns of caribou and whales in offshore areas may be affected. Other than the direct release of pollutants into the Arctic environment, there are multiple ways in which ecosystems could be disturbed, such as the construction of pipelines and roads, noise pollution from offshore drilling, seismic survey activity or additional maritime traffic as well as through the break-up of sea ice." The authors point out that the Arctic is not one but several ecosystems, and is "highly sensitive to damage" that would have a long-term impact . They are calling for "baseline knowledge about the natural environment and consistent environmental monitoring". Pollution sources
include mines, oil and gas installations, industrial sites and, in the Russian Arctic, nuclear waste from civilian and military installations, and from nuclear weapons testing on Novaya Zemlya. The report singles out a

potential oil spill as the "greatest risk in terms of environmental damage, potential cost and insurance" but says there are significant knowledge gaps in this area. Rates of natural biodegradation of oil in the Arctic could be expected to be lower than in more temperate environments such as the Gulf of Mexico, although there is currently insufficient understanding of how oil will degrade over the long term in the Arctic. Sea ice could assist in some oil-spill response techniques, such as in-situ burning and chemical dispersant application, but this could lead to air pollution and the release of chemicals into the marine environment without knowing where moving ice will eventually carry them. Unclear legal boundaries posed by a mosaic of regulations and governments in the Arctic are an additional challenge. The Lloyd's report notes that there is no international liability and compensation regime for oil spills .

22

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

1ACScience Leadership Advantage (8/8)


An EU proposal under discussion would apply to offshore oil projects in the Arctic territories of Norway and Denmark, and possibly to all EU companies anywhere they operate. Meanwhile, a taskforce is drawing up recommendations for the intergovernmental Arctic Council on an international instrument on marine oil pollution designed to speed up the process for clean-up and compensation payments, due for release next year. This may include an international liability and compensation instrument. Greenland has argued that "different national systems may lead to ambiguities and unnecessary delays in oil pollution responses and compensation payments" and that

any regime must adapt as understanding of the worst-case scenario in the Arctic changes. The Lloyd's report says the "inadequacies" of both company and government in the event of a disaster were demonstrated after the Macondo blowout. A smaller company than BP, faced with estimated $40bn clean-up and compensation costs, might have gone bankrupt, leaving the state to foot the bill, it notes. Lloyd's says it is essential that there is more investment in science and research to "close knowledge gaps, reduce uncertainties and manage risks". It calls for sizeable investment in infrastructure and surveillance to enable "safe economic activity" and argues that "full-scale exercises based on worst-case scenarios of environmental disaster should be run by companies". The Arctic's vulnerable environment, unpredictable climate and lack of a precedent on which to base cost assessments have led some environmental NGOs to argue that no compensation would be worth the risk of allowing drilling to take place in pristine offshore areas. Others are campaigning for more stringent
regulations and the removal of the liability cap for investors.

Arctic ecosystem key to global biodiversity Gill, Chair of the Circumpolar Biodiversity Monitoring Program, 2009. Michael Gill, 3-6 March 2009,

ABSTRACT: BIODIVERSITY AND ECOSYSTEM SERVICES. UNESCO. http://www.unesco.org/csi/LINKS/monaco -abstracts/Gill_abstract_MonacoUNESCOarctic.pdf

Arctic ecosystems and the biodiversity they support are experiencing growing pressure from climate change and resource development while established research and monitoring programs remain largely uncoordinated, lacking the ability to effectively monitor, understand and report on biodiversity trends at the circumpolar scale. The maintenance of healthy Arctic ecosystems is a global imperative as the Arctic plays a critical role in the Earths physical, chemical and biological balance. A coordinated and comprehensive effort for monitoring Arctic ecosystems is needed to facilitate effective and timely conservation and adaptation actions. The Arctics size and complexity represents a significant challenge towards detecting and attributing important biodiversity trends. This demands a scaled, pan-Arctic, ecosystem-based approach that not only identifies trends in biodiversity, but also identifies underlying causes. It is critical that this information be made available to generate effective strategies for adapting to changes now taking place in the Arctic - a process that ultimately depends on rigorous,
integrated, and efficient monitoring programmes that have the power to detect change within a management tim e frame. Biodiversity is a popular way of describing the diversity of life on earth: it includes all life forms and the ecosystems of which they are a part. World Food Day the anniversary of FAO's founding on 16 October 1945 celebrates, in particular, that part of biodiversity that nurtures people and contributes to long-term food security for all. Biodiversity forms the foundation for sustainable development. It is the basis for the environmental health of our planet and the source of economic and ecological security for future generations. In the developing world, biodiversity provides the assurance of food, countless raw materials such as fibre for clothing, materials for shelter, fertilizer, fuel and medicines, as well as a source of work energy in the form of animal traction. The rural poor depend upon biological resources for an estimated 90 percent of their needs. In the industrialized world access to diverse biological resources is necessary to support a vast array of industrial products. In the continuing drive to develop efficient and sustainable agriculture for many different conditions, these resources provide raw material for plant and animal breeding as well as the new biotechnologies. In addition, biodiversity maintains the ecological balance necessary for planetary and human survival.

Loss of biodiversity leads to extinction Environment News Service 2005. May 24, 2005. Humans Undermining the Very Biodiversity Needed for
Survival. http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/may2005/2005-05-24-01.html

In the last 50 years, humans have changed the diversity of life on the planet more than at any other time in history. Human activities have lifted many people out of poverty, but at a price the loss of biodiversity. A new assessment of biodiversity and human well being by top scientists from throughout the world shows that if humanity continues down this road, biological diversity will be depleted with life-threatening consequences for all, including human beings. "Biodiversity is where the human hunger for resources is taking its heaviest toll, and the inclusion of 15,589 species on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species is the clearest sign that we need
to change the way we produce and consume, said Jeff McNeely, chief scientist of the IUCN-World Conservation Union and contributor to the report. The assessment, launched as part of the celebrations for the International Day for Biological Diversity on May 22, was conducted by a panel of the Millenium Assessment, a partnership involving some 1,360 scientists who are experts in their fields. It is supported by 22 of the worlds scientific bodies, including The Royal Society of th e United Kingdom and the Third World Academy of Sciences. The panel defined biodiversity as "the variability among living organisms from all sources, including terrestrial, marine, and other aquatic ecosystems and the ecological complexes of which they are part

." Loss of biodiversity is a major barrier to achieving development goals, and poses increasing risks for future generations, said Dr. Walter Reid, director of the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment. The second Millennium Ecosystem Assessment report, "Biodiversity and Human Well-being: A Synthesis Report for the Convention on Biological Diversity," finds that although biodiversity is the foundation for human well-being, all of the likely future scenarios in the report lead to a further decline in biodiversity, contrary to the agreed global target to reduce the rate of biodiversity loss by 2010. The diversity of life provides the materials humans need for food, clothing and shelter, and also bestows security, health and freedom of choice. But, the assessment found, "the current pace and rhythm of human activities are harming
ecosystems, consuming biological resources and putting at risk the well-being of future generations.

23

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

TopicalityJurisdiction
United States means all areas subject to US jurisdiction
Words and Phrases, 6 (Words and Phrases Permanent Edition, United States, Volume 43A, p. 265-267 December
2006, Thomson West) C.A.5 (Fla.) 1974. Term United sense, includes

States, as used in Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control act in a territorial all the places and waters, continental or insular, subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, except the Canal Zone.

Coastal States have jurisdiction over natural resources of its continental shelf
Campbell, 2008( 05/08/2008, United States Arctic Ocean Management & the Law of the Sea Convention, This paper
Under UNCLOS, the

was written while on a summer externship at the U.S. Dept. of Commerce (DOC), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) General Counsel for International Law, http://www.gc.noaa.gov/documents/US_Arctic_Ocean_Mgt_08-05-08.pdf)

coastal state has jurisdiction over the natural resources of the shelf including sedimentary continental shelf comprises the seabed and subsoil of the submarine areas that extend beyond [a coastal states] territorial sea.18 Every coastal state may claim a continental shelf of two hundred miles. This claim is made automatically, and there is no need to submit evidence of a continental
species, oil, gas, and mineral resources. The shelf up to two hundred miles. However, under UNCLOS, a coastal state has the opportunity to claim extended continental shelf if the state can demonstrate that certain criteria are met under Article 76 of UNCLOS.

Coastal States have the right to ensure safe maritime commerce in the arctic to prevent pollution
Campbell, 2008( 05/08/2008, United States Arctic Ocean Management & the Law of the Sea Convention, This paper
The melting sea ice in the Arctic region will precipitate an increase in ship traffic from both commercial and passenger vessels. However, the

was written while on a summer externship at the U.S. Dept. of Commerce (DOC), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) General Counsel for International Law, http://www.gc.noaa.gov/documents/US_Arctic_Ocean_Mgt_08-05-08.pdf)

Arctic will present many navigational challenges, and great caution will need to be exercised by ships transiting these waters. The most prominent threat to the marine environment is shipping. The management of this threat will play an integral role in the regulation and development of the Arctic, as the risk of damage to invaluable marine resources is much higher in this region.
Many provisions of UNCLOS address shipping and its relation to the protection of the marine environment and pollution from ships. International entities such as the International Maritime Organization and the Arctic Council have addressed the issues that are likely to arise with the increase of shipping into, out of, and through the Arctic. The U.S. Arctic policy dates to 1994. However, climate change and the increase in shipping has prompted the need for key changes to that policy that are being addressed in a forthcoming update of the 1994 policy. The

top priorities of the U.S., revised for todays Arctic circumstances, will be to facilitate safe, secure, and reliable navigation, to protect maritime commerce and the marine environment. As previously mentioned, a shipping incident involving the release of a
harmful substance into the pristine Arctic environment could have lasting catastrophic affects. In addition to the right to explore and exploit the resources of the extended continental shelf, UNCLOS

gives coastal states the right to regulate such activities as shipping in order to protect and preserve rare and fragile ecosystems as well as the habitat of depleted, threatened or endangered species and other forms of marine life.31 While this protection is ideally
achieved though cooperative and preventative international measures, the U.S. has developed policy to address Arctic issues in waters under its jurisdiction and beyond because UNCLOS also imposes certain duties on coastal states that have jurisdiction over the extended continental shelf.32 The ability of a coastal state to take action with regard to pollution from ships in its EEZ is arguably limited. Article 234 of UNCLOS, however, is applicable in ice-covered waters only, making it an important provision when considering the regulation of the Arctic region. To

ensure safe maritime commerce in the Arctic, it is understood that the U.S. will likely work to develop infrastructure to support shipping, search and rescue capabilities, short and long range aids to navigation, high-risk area vessel traffic management, iceberg warnings, other sea ice information, and effective shipping standards. To achieve this, the U.S. seeks to establish a risk-based capability to prevent
and respond to all hazards, threats, and weather in all seasons in the Arctic environment

24

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

TopicalityTerritories/Possessions
United States includes territories and possessions
US Code, 07 (2 USCS 1966, lexis)
(f) Definition of United States. As used in this section, the term "United States" means each of the several States of the United States, the District of Columbia, and territories and possessions of the United States.

The United States controls much of the Arctic (Northwest Passage) via territorial sea sovereignty laws means its considered in the United States.
NSPD-66 2009 (National Security Presidential Directive and Homeland Security
Presidential Directive http://www.fas.org/irp/offdocs/nspd/nspd-66.htm) A. The United States is an Arctic nation, with varied and compelling interests in that region.
directive takes into account several developments, including, among others: effects of climate change and increasing human activity in the Arctic region; growing awareness that the Arctic region is both fragile and rich in resources. III. POLICY A. This Altered national policies on homeland security and defense; The The establishment and ongoing work of the Arctic Council; and A

It is the policy of the United States to: Meet national security and homeland security needs relevant to the Arctic region; Protect the Arctic environment and conserve its biological resources; Ensure that natural resource management and economic development in the region are environmentally sustainable; Strengthen institutions for cooperation among the eight Arctic nations (the United States, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Iceland,
Norway, the Russian Federation, and Sweden); Involve the Arctic's indigenous communities in decisions that affect them; and Enhance scientific monitoring and research into local, regional, and global environmental issues. B. National Security and Homeland Security Interests in the Arctic

The United States has broad and fundamental national security interests in the Arctic region and is prepared to operate either independently or in conjunction with other states to safeguard these interests. These interests include such matters as missile defense and early warning; deployment of sea and air systems
for strategic sealift, strategic deterrence, maritime presence, and maritime security operations; and ensuring freedom of navigation and overflight.

The United States also has fundamental homeland security interests in preventing terrorist attacks and mitigating those criminal or hostile acts that could increase the United States vulnerability to terrorism in the Arctic region. The Arctic region is primarily a maritime domain; as such, existing policies and authorities relating to maritime areas continue to apply, including those relating to law enforcement.[1] Human activity in the Arctic region is increasing and is projected to increase further in coming years. This requires the United States to assert a more active and influential national presence to protect its Arctic interests and to project sea power throughout the region. The United States exercises authority in accordance with lawful claims of United States sovereignty, sovereign rights, and jurisdiction in the Arctic region, including sovereignty within the territorial sea, sovereign rights and jurisdiction within the United States exclusive economic zone and on the continental shelf, and appropriate control in the United States contiguous zone. Freedom of the seas is a top national priority. The Northwest Passage is a strait used for international navigation , and the Northern Sea Route includes straits used for international navigation; the regime of transit passage applies to passage through those straits. Preserving the rights and duties relating to navigation and overflight in the Arctic region supports our ability to exercise these rights throughout the world, including through strategic straits. Implementation: In carrying out this policy as it relates to national security and homeland
security interests in the Arctic, the Secretaries of State, Defense, and Homeland Security, in coordination with heads of other relevant executive departments and agencies, shall: Develop greater capabilities and capacity, as necessary, to protect United States air, land, and sea borders in the Arctic region; Increase Arctic maritime domain awareness in order to protect maritime commerce, critical infrastructure, and key resources; Preserve the global mobility of United States military and civilian vessels and aircraft throughout the Arctic region; Project a sovereign United States maritime presence in the Arctic in support of essential United States interests; and Encourage the peaceful resolution of disputes in the Arctic region.

25

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

TopicalityTerritories/Possessions
Existing treaties establish many areas of the artic seabed as within United States boundaries
NSPD-66 2009 (National Security Presidential Directive and Homeland Security
Presidential Directive http://www.fas.org/irp/offdocs/nspd/nspd-66.htm) Defining with certainty the area of the Arctic seabed and subsoil in which the United States may exercise its sovereign rights over natural resources such as oil, natural gas, methane hydrates, minerals, and living marine
species is critical to our national interests in energy security, resource management, and environmental protection. The most effective way to achieve international recognition and legal certainty for our extended continental shelf is through the

procedure available to States Parties to the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea. The United States and Canada have an unresolved boundary in the Beaufort Sea. United States policy recognizes a boundary in this area based on equidistance. The United States recognizes that the boundary area may contain oil, natural gas, and other resources. The United States and Russia are abiding by the terms of a maritime boundary treaty concluded in 1990, pending its entry into force. The United States is prepared to enter the agreement into force once
ratified by the Russian Federation. Implementation: In carrying out this policy as it relates to extended continental shelf and boundary issues, the Secretary of State, in coordination with heads of other relevant executive departments and agencies, shall: Take all actions necessary to establish the outer limit of the continental shelf appertaining to the United Consider the conservation and management of natural resources during the process of delimiting the extended continental shelf; and Continue to urge the Russian Federation to ratify the 1990 United States-Russia maritime boundary agreement.

States, in the Arctic and in other regions, to the fullest extent permitted under international law;

US can use icebreakers in the arctic, Bush said so.


NSPD66, 2009, (National Security Presidential Directive and Homeland Security
Presidential Directive January 9, 2009 http://www.fas.org/irp/offdocs/nspd/nspd-66.htm) Maritime Transportation in the Arctic Region The United States priorities for maritime transportation in the Arctic region are: To facilitate safe, secure, and reliable navigation; To protect maritime commerce; and To protect the environment. Safe, secure, and environmentally sound maritime commerce in the Arctic region depends on infrastructure to support shipping activity, search and rescue capabilities, short- and long-

range aids to navigation, high-risk area vessel-traffic management, iceberg warnings and other sea ice information, effective shipping standards, and measures to protect the marine environment. In addition, effective search and rescue in the Arctic will require local, State, Federal, tribal, commercial, volunteer, scientific, and multinational cooperation. Working through the International Maritime Organization (IMO), the United States promotes strengthening existing measures and, as necessary, developing new measures to improve the safety and security of maritime transportation, as well as to protect the marine environment in the Arctic region. These measures may include ship routing and reporting systems, such as traffic separation and vessel traffic management schemes in Arctic chokepoints; updating and strengthening of the Guidelines for Ships Operating in Arctic Ice-Covered Waters; underwater noise standards for commercial shipping; a review of shipping insurance issues; oil and other hazardous material pollution response agreements; and environmental standards. Implementation: In

carrying out this policy as it relates to maritime transportation in the Arctic region, the Secretaries of State, Defense, Transportation, Commerce, and Homeland Security, in coordination with heads of other relevant executive departments and agencies, shall: Develop additional measures, in cooperation with other nations, to address issues that are likely to arise from expected increases in shipping into, out of, and through the Arctic region; Commensurate with the level of human activity in the region, establish a risk-based capability to address hazards in the Arctic environment. Such efforts shall advance work on pollution prevention and response standards; determine basing and logistics support requirements , including necessary airlift and icebreaking capabilities; and improve plans and cooperative agreements for search and rescue; Develop Arctic waterways management
regimes in accordance with accepted international standards, including vessel traffic-monitoring and routing; safe navigation standards; accurate and standardized charts; and accurate and timely environmental and navigational information; and Evaluate the feasibility of using access through the Arctic for strategic sealift and humanitarian aid and disaster relief.

26

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

TopicalityIn the US
As long as the icebreakers are built in America, they fall under transportation and infrastructure
DeMarban, 2012 (Alex, April11th, writer for Alaska Dispatch, Should Alaska Take the Lead in Financing New Icebreakers, Alaska Dispatch, http://www.alaskadispatch.com/article/shouldalaska-take-lead-financing-new-icebreakers)
Last fall, Young introduced legislation calling on the federal government to lease two large icebreakers for at least 10 years from private entities that own and operate the ships. The ships must be built on American soil, according to the bill,

which remains in the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee.

In means within the limits NOT throughout


Cullen, Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 52, Commissioner, Court of Appeals of Kentucky,
November 13, 1952 Riehl et al. V. Kentucky unemployment compensation commission; the judgment is affirmed. Rehearing denied; COMBS, J., and SIMS, C. J., dissenting. http://ky.findacase.com/research/wfrmDocViewer.aspx/xq/fac.19521113_0040095.KY.htm/qx We do not find any ambiguity in KRS 341.070(1). It is our opinion that the key word in the statute is the word 'in,' preceding the words 'each of three calendar quarters', and if the word is accorded its ordinary and common meaning, the statute does not require simultaneous employment. According to Webster's New International Dictionary, the word 'in,' used with relation to a period of time, means 'during the course of.' The same meaning, expressed in another way, would be 'within the limits or duration of.' Employing this
meaning, the statute says that an employer is subject to the Act if, during the course of, or within the limits or duration of each of three calendar quarters, he had in covered employment four or more workers, to each of whom the required amount of wages was paid. This clearly means that the employment need not be simultaneous. Obviously, the word 'in' does not mean

'throughout' or 'for the entire period of,' because then there would be no point in adding the requirement of the payment of a minimum of $50 in wages. In these times, no worker employed for a full

calendar quarter would be paid less than $50 in wages. The appellant seeks to read into the statute the words 'at the same time,' following the words 'had in covered employment'. There is no justification for this, unless the word 'in' means 'during any one period of time in.' We are not aware of any authority for ascribing such a meaning to the word 'in'.

In not within in means location whereas within means well inside


Dilip 11, Aron Dilip (Contributing Editor India) Professor in Social Science Difference
Between in and within in English Grammar Jan 24th, 2011 http://www.differencebetween.com/difference-between-in-and-within/#ixzz1yL723hra BK In and within though look alike, they differ in their usage in English grammar. The preposition in is used to describe the noun in locative case. It describes the location of a particular thing or an individual. In the sentence he lives in New York City, the preposition in describes the location of a person. On the other hand the word within gives the sense of well inside. For example in the sentence, he works well within himself, the word within

conveys the sense of well inside and gives the idea he works well inside his self. Here the word within gives the extra meaning of good. In the same way these two words in and within give different meanings when used

differently with other words. For example the expressions in time and within the given time, the two words in and within are used in different senses. Loot at the two examples, namely, he came in time and he came within two hours. In the first sentence the preposition in gives the sense of advance and gives the idea of he came in advance. In the second sentence the word within gives the sense of under and gives the idea of he came under two hours. Thus it is interesting to note that the word within is used in the sense of under whereas on the other hand the preposition in is used in the sense of advance and not in the
sense of under. Look at the usage, namely, he came in two hours. Here the preposition in is used in the sense of at the completion or at the stroke of. Hence it gives the idea of he came at the completion of two hours. These two words are v ery much used in combination of several verbs too.

27

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

TopicalityGood General Cards


Plan is investment in transportation infrastructure
Alaska Northern Waters Task Force, 12 (January, Arctic Planning & Infrastructure
Investment http://housemajority.org/coms/anw/pdfs/27/draft_recommendations_part_02.pdf) A number of state initiatives are underway to look at the potential needs and feasibility of infrastructure projects in Arctic regions of the state. These include the Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities Industrial Use Roads Study, Arctic Ports Study, and similar work relating to possible land transportation links to Nome, Ambler, and the Umiat region. Immediate investment in Arctic infrastructure is a foremost priority for Alaska and the entire United States. Action is needed to enable the responsible development of resources; facilitate, secure, and benefit from new global transportation routes; and safeguard the wellbeing of Arctic residents and ecosystems. This investment will improve the safety, security, and reliability of transportation in the regiona goal established by the U.S. Arctic Policy signed by President Bush in 2009. As interest and activity in the Arctic continues to rise, U.S. preparedness in the region becomes ever more important to national security.

Domestic ice breakers develop transportation infrastructure


LT Benjamin Morgan, Mobility and Ice Operations, US Coast Guard Office of Maritime Transportation Systems, Domestic Icebreaking Operations, Proceedings, Spring 2011, http://www.uscg.mil/proceedings/spring2011/articles/39_Morgan.pdf While domestic icebreaking operations may fall among the Coast Guards less glamorous assignments, this mission is important for maritime mobility and supports our national transportation infrastructure. Operations include establishing and maintaining tracks (paths through the ice) in connecting waterways during the winter navigation season, escorting vessels to ensure their transit is not impeded by ice, freeing vessels that become beset, clearing/relieving ice jams, removing obstructions or hazards to navigation, and advising mariners of current ice and waterways conditions. This vital icebreaking mission is executed domestically by one
heavy icebreaker, nine ice-breaking tugs, 11 small harbor tugs, and 12 ice-capable buoy-tending vessels.

28

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

TopicalityMaritime Territories
Transportation infrastructure includes facilitation of safe navigation in maritime territories.
NSPD-66 2009 (National Security Presidential Directive and Homeland Security
Presidential Directive http://www.fas.org/irp/offdocs/nspd/nspd-66.htm) Maritime Transportation in the Arctic Region The United States priorities for maritime transportation in the Arctic region are: To facilitate safe, secure, and reliable navigation; To protect maritime commerce; and To protect the environment. Safe, secure, and environmentally sound maritime commerce in the Arctic region depends on infrastructure to support shipping activity, search and rescue capabilities, short- and long-range aids to navigation, high-risk area vessel-traffic management, iceberg warnings and other sea ice information, effective shipping standards, and measures to protect the marine environment.
addition, effective search and rescue in the Arctic will require local, State, Federal, tribal, commercial, volunteer, scientific, and multinational cooperation. Working through the International Maritime Organization (IMO), the United States promotes strengthening existing measures and, as necessary, developing new measures to improve the safety and security of maritime transportation, as well as to protect the marine environment in the Arctic region. These measures may include ship In

routing and reporting systems, such as traffic separation and vessel traffic management schemes in Arctic chokepoints; updating and strengthening of the Guidelines for Ships Operating in Arctic Ice-Covered Waters; underwater noise standards for commercial shipping; a review of shipping insurance issues; oil and other hazardous material pollution response agreements; and environmental standard.

29

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

TopicalityArctic Transportation Routes


Icebreakers help protect nations ports and waterways, they be topical
ANWTF, 1/30/2012 (ANWTF, consisting of state legislators, leaders from Alaska
communities, and representatives of key state and federal agencies, Findings and Recommendations of the Alaska Northern Waters Task Force, http://housemajority.org/coms/anw/pdfs/27/NWTF_Full_Report_Color.pdf) Immediate investment in Arctic infrastructure is a foremost priority for Alaska and the entire United States. Alaska will need to explore ways to attract substantial sources of capital investment in addition to state and federal funding. Action is needed to enable the responsible development of resources; facilitate, secure, and benefit from new global transportation routes; and safeguard Arctic residents
and ecosystems. This investment will improve the safety, security, and reliability of transportation in the region a goal established by the U.S. Arctic Policy signed by President Bush in 2009. As interest and activity in the Arctic continues to rise, Americas preparedness in the region becomes ever more important to national security.

Increased human activity related to shipping, oil and gas development, commercial fishing, and tourism will require, at a minimum, new ports and safe harbors, equipment and facilities for oil spill response, additional Polar Class icebreakers for the U.S. fleet, and improved charting and mapping. The U. S. Coast
Guards needs in these areas well illustrate the magnitude of infrastruct ure investment necessary in the Arctic. The Search & Rescue (SAR) agreement recently negotiated by the eight Arctic Nations through the Arctic Council commits the United States to search and rescue response in regions of the Arctic. Domestically, the National Contingency Plan requires the U.S. Coast Guard to oversee oil spill planning and preparedness in coastal waters and to supervise any oil spill response. Additionally, the U.S. Coast Guards mission is to protect the public,

the environment, and U.S. economic interests in the nations ports and waterways, along the coast, on international waters, or in any maritime region as required for national security.1

30

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

InherencyNow Key
Increase in water space hasnt been accompanied with increased investment in icebreakers we dont have the capacity to operate in the Arctic.
States News Service 5/9. May 9, 2012. COAST GUARD: U.S. SHOULD HAVE 3 HEAVY, 3 MEDIUM
ICEBREAKERS ADMIRAL PAPP OPEN TO "LEASING OPPORTUNITIES" BEFORE FUTURE SHIPS ARE BUILT, ALASKA "LUCKED OUT" THAT HEALY WAS AVAILABLE FOR NOME MISSION. http://www.lexisnexis.com/lnacui2api/auth/checkbrowser.do?rand=0.6300832076938608&cookieState=0&ipcounter=1&bhcp=1
The following information was released by Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski: The funding priorities and needs of the United States Coast Guard took center stage today at a hearing of the U.S. Senate Homeland Security Appropriations Subcommittee held at Senator Murkowskis request. Spurred on by USCG Commandant Admiral Robert Papps recent comments that the

U.S. is behind the power curve regarding the Arctic, Murkowski drilled down into multiple issues critical to Alaska. During testimony, Papp informed Murkowski and the committee that Alaska lucked out by having the USCGC Healy nearby for the emergency mission to Nome earlier this year. The Admiral had been asked to deploy it to Antarctica, and he testified I am delighted I do not have to sit here today and
explain why Healy was in Antarctica when Nome was starving for fuel. Murkowski also asked Admiral Papp directly, How many icebreakers do we need? (below) He informed her that the Coast Guards study indicated optimally, we

would have three heavy icebreakers and three medium-sized icebreakers. The U.S. presently has one active medium icebreaker. Murkowski also called attention (below) to
porthole and asked what Alaska can realistically expect as a timeframe for a new icebreaker to be launched. Though Papp informed her that a decade will be needed until a new one is in the water, he said he will look at leasing

the $8 million in the FY2013 Coast Guard budget allocated for an icebreaker in March, she told the Alaska state legislature that amount wont get you a

opportunities and assess how that would work. Other key moments during the hearing: Murkowski: We are seeing more water in the Arctic that the Coast Guard is charged with. What we havent done as a Congress is step up to that responsibility as an Arctic Nation. Committee Chair Senator Mary Landrieu (D-LA): Weve got to build an icebreaker; we have to build an icebreaker. Admiral Papp: Senator, you and I know we are an Arctic Nation, but its difficult to convince some people of this fact. We need to
educate people.

Changes in artic makes now key time


Treadwell 2011, Hon. Mead Lieutenant Governor, Alaska testified in hearing to examine the U.S. Coast Guards role and
operations in the Arctic.: U.S. Subcommittee: USCG Needs Icebreakers BY GCAPTAIN STAFF ON DECEMBER 4, 2011 http://gcaptain.com/u-s-subcommittee-uscg-icebreakers/ It is time for the nation to act and act now to add new polar class icebreakers to the United

States Coast Guards fleet. With so much happening in the North today, the need is more urgent and apparent than ever. We would like to ask this Committee, and by extension Congress and the Executive Branch, to look with us at the bigger picture the historic changes happening in the Arctic and what they portend for world commerce and Alaskas shores and recognize three imminent needs: First, the United States must commission new heavy icebreakers to operate in the Arctic. Second, we need legal measures in addition to icebreakers to protect our shores from the dangers of unregulated itinerant vessels carrying hazardous cargoes near our coasts. And third, Congress and the Administration must fulfill the legal mandates that are already in place regarding icebreakers.

31

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

InherencyMore Ships Needed


Icebreakers are failing now
Ahlers 2012 January 05, |By Mike M., CNN Coast Guard mission to Nome exposes U.S. limits
in ice-breaking capability http://articles.cnn.com/2012-01-05/us/us_alaska-nomeicebreaker_1_icebreakers-polar-star-polar-sea/3?_s=PM:US The nation's two heavy polar icebreakers -- the Polar Star and the Polar Sea -- are out of commission, with the Polar Sea unlikely to see service again. The 420-foot Healy, meanwhile, is a medium-sized icebreaker and it does not have the capabilities of its larger predecessors. The Nome mission has lengthened the eight-month deployment of its 80-person crew, robbing them of a Christmas holiday. And it is delaying scheduled repairs to the ship, possibly affecting its scientific mission scheduled for next summer. This further underscores just how thin the nation's ice-breaking capabilities have become. By contrast, Russia has 25 polar icebreakers (including eight heavy ones), according to a Congressional Research Service report. Finland and Sweden have seven icebreakers each. Canada has six. " The United States needs icebreakers , and this incident proves it," said Alaska's Lt. Gov. Mead Treadwell. Treadwell said the dearth of icebreakers means the U.S. is not competitive with other Arctic nations, which are exploiting new water passages created by climate changes. Icebreakers could extend
the seasons for some state industries, he said. But many people in the Lower 48 just don't understand, Treadwell said. "The United States has been an Arctic nation since 1867, but most people still think of Alaska as Seward's Folly," he said. The Nome mission "brings awareness that there is a bigger issue there," said Nome Mayor Denise Michels. "It really does." "There is more of a

need now than ever before in our history for new ice-breaking ships capable of reaching the shores of our communities," wrote Jason Evans, chairman of Sitnasuak Native Corporation, Nome's village corporation.

Status quo fails Coast Guard lacks icebreakers - resource extraction


Reiss has covered Arctic issues for Smithsonian, Parade and Outside Magazines, 2010 (Bob,
March 13, Cold, Hard Facts: U.S. Trails in Race for the Top of the World, Politics Daily, http://www.politicsdaily.com/2010/03/13/cold-hard-facts-u-s-trails-in-race-for-the-top-ofthe-world/) But more traffic means more danger from collisions and fuel spills, and the Coast Guard lacks the icebreakers and communication equipment necessary for a year-round Arctic presence. Resource extraction presents another challenge, as there are enormous untapped reserves of oil and gas in the region. The 5.5 million-square-mile area north of the Arctic Circle -- part of the U.S., Russia, Canada, Denmark (which owns Greenland), Finland, Norway, Iceland and Sweden -- contains up to 25 percent of the Earth's undiscovered oil and gas reserves, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. In 2007,
Norway opened its Snow White gas field, projected to supply more than $1.5 billion of liquefied natural gas annually for the next quarter-century. And Russia's resurgence as a world power has been aided by Arctic resources. But to

remove those resources you have to own them, and nations are now scrambling to claim vast new areas of sea bottom. They can do so by proving them to be extensions of their continental shelves.

32

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

InherencyUnderfunded Now
Ice breakers are underfunded, under-maintained, and diminished
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World: An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) The committee finds that both operations and maintenance of the polar icebreaker fleet have been underfunded for many years, and the capabilities of the nations icebreaking fleet have diminished substantially. Deferred long-term maintenance and failure to execute a plan for replacement or refurbishment of the nations icebreaking ships have placed national interests in the polar regions at risk. The nation needs the capability to operate in both polar regions reliably and at will. Specifically, the committee recommends the following:

U.S agencies are unable to meet Arctic mission requirements with current resources
GAO An analysis of the reports assembled by various government offices 12/01/11
[Government Accountability Office] DHS-OIG Report on the Coast Guard's Polar Icebreakers http://www.gao.gov/htext/d12254t.html DHS-OIG Report on the Coast Guard's Polar Icebreakers.[Footnote 22] The DHS Office of the Inspector General (OIG) reported that the Coast Guard and other U.S. agencies are unable to meet their current Arctic mission requirements with existing icebreaking resources. This January 2011 report noted that the Coast Guard's icebreaking resources are unlikely to meet future demands as well, in part because the agency has not followed its life cycle replacement plan, which requires replacement of icebreaking ships after 30 years of service. Further, between fiscal year 2006 and fiscal year 2009, the National Science Foundation (NSF) had budgetary authority over the Coast Guard's icebreaker fleet. Among other things, the Inspector General reported that this funding arrangement resulted in deferred maintenance on the icebreakers, which has affected their long-term operability. The report concludes that without funding for new icebreakers or major service life extensions of existing ones, the U.S. will lose all polar icebreaking capabilities by 2029.[Footnote 23] The OIG report included four recommendations related to the Arctic.[Footnote 24]

33

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Ships Decaying Now


The ships are currently too old and not in working condition- New reinforcements are needed now
Ronald O'Rourke, Specialist in Naval Affairs, 2012 (June 14, Coast Guard Polar
Icebreaker Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress Congressional Research Service) The Coast Guards three polar icebreakers are multimission ships that can break through ice, support scientific research operations, and perform other missions typically performed by Coast Guard ships. Heavy Polar Icebreakers Polar Star and Polar Sea. Polar Star (WAGB-10) and Polar Sea (WAGB-11),5 sister ships built to the same general design (Figure 1 and Figure 2), were procured in the early 1970s as replacements for earlier U.S. icebreakers. They were designed for 30-year service lives, and were
built by Lockheed Shipbuilding of Seattle, WA, a division of Lockheed that also built ships for the U.S. Navy, but which exited the shipbuilding business in the late 1980s. Neither ship is currently in operational condition. Polar Star was commissioned into service on January 19, 1976, and consequently is now several years beyond its intended 30-year service life. The ship currently is not in operational condition due to worn out electric motors and other problems. The Coast Guard placed the ship in caretaker status on July 1, 2006.7 Congress in FY2009 and FY2010 provided funding to repair Polar

Star and return it to service for 7 to 10 years; the Coast Guard expects the $62.8 million reactivation project to be completed in December 2012.8 The ship is to undergo testing during the summer of2013, and be ready for operations in FY2014.9 Although the repair work on the ship is intended to give it another 7 to 10 years of service, an August 30, 2010, press report quoted the Commandant of the Coast Guard, Admiral Robert Papp, as saying, Were getting her back into service, but its a little uncertain to me how many more years we can get out of her in her current condition, even after we do the engine repairs.10

34

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Current Ships Fail


The lack of maneuverability of the Ice Breakers means a lack of performance in 4 key areas
Ronald O'Rourke, Specialist in Naval Affairs, 2012 (June 14, Coast Guard Polar
Icebreaker Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress Congressional Research Service)
[The study] concludes that future In July 2011, the Coast Guard provided to Congress a study on the Coast Guards missions and capabilities for operations in high-latitude (i.e., polar) areas. The study, commonly known as the High Latitude Study, is dated July 2010 on its cover.17 The High Latitude Study concluded the following:

capability and capacity gaps will significantly impact four [Coast Guard] mission areas in the Arctic: Defense Readiness, Ice Operations, Marine Environmental Protection, and Ports, Waterways, and Coastal Security. These mission areas address the protection of important national interests in a geographic area where other nations are actively pursuing their own national goals.... The common and dominant contributor to these significant mission impacts is the gap in polar icebreaking capability. The increasing obsolescence of the Coast Guards
icebreaker fleet will further exacerbate mission performance gaps in the coming years.... The gap in polar icebreaking capacity has resulted in a lack of at-sea time for crews and senior personnel and a corresponding gap in training and leadership. In addition to providing multi-mission capability and intrinsic mobility, a helicopter-capable surface unit would eliminate the need for acquiring an expensive shore-based infrastructure that may only be needed on a seasonal or occasional basis. The most capable surface unit would be a polar icebreaker. Polar

icebreakers can transit safely in a variety of ice conditions and have the endurance to operate far from logistics bases. The Coast Guards polar icebreakers have conducted a wide range of planned and unscheduled Coast Guard missions in the past. Polar icebreakers possess the ability to carry large numbers of passengers, cargo, boats, and helicopters. Polar icebreakers also have substantial command, control, and communications capabilities. The flexibility and mobility of polar icebreakers would assist the Coast Guard in closing future mission performance gaps effectively....Existing
capability and capacity gaps are expected to significantly impact future Coast Guard performance in two Antarctic mission areas: Defense Readiness and Ice Operations.

Future gaps may involve an inability to carry out probable and easily projected mission requirements, such as the McMurdo resupply, or readiness to respond to lesspredictable events. By their nature, contingencies requiring the use of military capabilities often occur quickly. As is the case in the Arctic, the deterioration of the Coast Guards icebreaker fleet is the primary driver for this significant mission impact. This will further widen mission performance gaps in the
coming years. The recently issued Naval Operations Concept 2010 requires a surface presence in both the Arctic and Antarctic. This further exacerbates the capability gap left by the deterioration of the icebreaker fleet.... The significant deterioration of the Coast Guard icebreaker fleet and the emerging mission demands to meet future functional requirements in the high latitude regions dictate that the Coast Guard acquire material solutions to close the capability gaps....

The ice breaker fleet have increasingly limited operations


GAO An analysis of the reports assembled by various government offices 12/01/11
[Government Accountability Office] DHS-OIG Report on the Coast Guard's Polar Icebreakers http://www.gao.gov/htext/d12254t.html The most significant issue facing the Coast Guard's icebreaker fleet is the growing obsolescence of these vessels and the resulting capability gap caused by their increasingly limited operations. As we noted in our 2010 report, Coast Guard officials reported challenges fulfilling the agency's statutory icebreaking mission, let alone its standing commitment to use the icebreakers to support the Navy as needed.[Footnote 19] Since then, at least three reports have further identified the Coast Guard's challenges to meeting its current and
future icebreaking mission requirements in the Arctic with its existing polar icebreaker fleet, as well as the challenges it faces to acquire new icebreakers. The Coast Guard's existing fleet includes three icebreakers that are capable of operating in the Arctic.

35

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: US Building More


The Coast Guard has a single ice breaker still in commission, with no plans to make more
Miller, Author for KQED News, 5/7 (Craig, KQED News, Iconic Icebreaker Makes Last
Voyage, http://blogs.kqed.org/climatewatch/2012/05/07/iconic-icebreaker-makes-lastvoyage-to-scrapyard/, DOA: 7/9/12) Glaciers are slipping away everywhere. It was tough to see this one go. Im talking about a ship, not an actual river of ice. This morning I watched the retired Coast Guard icebreaker Glacier cast off on what is likely to be its final voyage, from a Vallejo dry dock to a scrapyard in Brownsville, Texas. It seemed like a poignant moment, given the decline of the U.S. icebreaker fleet. Just as Arctic seas are opening up to unprecedented shipping activity, the Coast Guard is left with just one icebreaker in working order. Icebreakers are important research platforms and could play a vital role in responding to oil spills from offshore drilling in far northern waters. Ben Koether sees it as more than poignant. Its a tragedy and a crisis, he told me by phone from Connecticut. Its just ludicrous. Koether is an electronics executive who was the
Glaciers navigator for two Antarctic voyages, in 1959 and 1962. In its heyday, the ship participated in annual re-supply missions to Antarctic bases and was used as a platform for oceanographic research in polar waters. Launched in 1954, the Glacier

was decommissioned more than 20 years ago and is well beyond seeing active service. But Koether
has been leading an effort to save the Glacier from the blowtorch and turn it into a floating museum of oceanography.

The Glacier may be replaced, but there is no plan for more


Miller, Author for KQED News, 5/7 (Craig, KQED News, Iconic Icebreaker Makes Last
Voyage, http://blogs.kqed.org/climatewatch/2012/05/07/iconic-icebreaker-makes-lastvoyage-to-scrapyard/, DOA: 7/9/12) Seeing the ships 300-foot rusting form depart ADRs Mare Island shipyard between two tugs, one might reasonably conclude that the battle has been lost. Absolutely not, says Koether, who says the dismantling contractor has agreed in principle to swap the Glacier for another one in the U.S. reserve fleet, managed by the federal
Maritime Administration (MARAD), but MARAD has yet to approve the deal. The Glacier rests in a Mare Island drydock while its hull is prepared for towing to Texas. Each of its twin propellers was 17 feet across. Koether says the Glaciers design is unequaled even today. Built originally for the Navy, the Glacier had a heeling system that could free it from heavy ice by rapidly pumping 140,000 gallons of water from s ide-to-side. Her power came from giant diesel engines and twin 17-foot propellers and Koether says she was built more stoutly than subsequent breakers in the fleet, with thicker steel and more ribbing.

As for beefing up the U.S. polar fleet, prospects appear dim, though the Coast Guard has asked for funding to build at least one more icebreaker. As the ice melts, you need more icebreakers instead of less, says Koether, noting that the Russians have more than a dozen in the works, some nuclear-powered.

36

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: 2012 Budget


Even with one repaired demands are still not met- even with 2012 budget
Foreign Policy Blogs Network, December 7 (2011, Congressional Subcommittee on
Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation holds hearing on icebreakers, Lexis)KW During his testimony before the subcommittee, Coast Guard Admiral Robert J. Papp also expressed his concern about taking the Polar Star out of service. Interestingly, though, he also noted that the National Security Cutter Program is essential to the USCG's role in the Last Frontier. Papp stated, "The National Security Cutter is more important to me to carrying out Coast Guard missions in Alaska - but we still need new icebreakers as well. In sum, it is my judgment and advice to you that Polar Star must be kept as part of the heavy icebreaker bridging strategy for the next five to ten years, and that the NSC shipbuilding program momentum must be maintained." National Security Cutters are a class of ship that , and this summer, the first NSC carried out a patrol in Alaska. The Coast Guard Cutter Bertholf took part in Operation Northern Edge, demonstrating that cutters can be useful in northern waters. The fiscal year 2012 budget would allow for one heavy icebreaker and one medium icebreaker, which the Department of Homeland Security says "will allow the Coast Guard to meet operational requirements." Yet the USCG's High Lati-tude Region Mission Analysis Report, submitted to Congress in July 2011, states that the services needs four heavy icebreakers and two medium ones to fulfill both its statutory missions and the Naval Operations Concept 2010 (NOC-2010). In a small footnote (#30), the concept states, "The current Icebreaker
demand requires a 1.0 presence in the Arctic and 1.0 in the Antarctic."

37

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: Global Warming Solves Ice


Melting polar ice doesnt matter actually increases demand for icebreakers due to increased arctic travel
ORourke, specialist in naval affairs, 6/14. Ronald ORourke Coast Guard Polar
Icebreaker Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress. Congressional Research Service. http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/weapons/RL34391.pdf Although polar ice is diminishing due to climate change, observers generally expect that this development will not eliminate the need for U.S. polar icebreakers, and in some respects might increase mission demands for them. Even with the diminishment of polar ice, there are still significant ice-covered areas in the polar regions. Diminishment of polar ice could lead in coming years to increased commercial ship, cruise ship, and naval surface ship operations, as well as increased exploration for oil and other resources, in the Arcticactivities that could require increased levels of support from polar icebreakers. 2 Changing ice conditions in Antarctic waters have made the McMurdo resupply mission more challenging since 2000. 3 An April 18, 2011, press report states that the Commandant of the Coast Guard, Admiral Robert Papp, sees plenty of reasons the United States will need polar icebreakers for the foreseeable future, despite speculation that thinning ice in the Arctic could make the icebreakers replaceable with other ice-hardened ships, the admiral said last week. I dont see that causing us to back down on some minimal level of polar icebreakers, Papp told Inside the Navy. The fact of the matter is, theres still winter ice thats forming. Its coming down pretty far. We don't need to get up there just during summer months when theres open water. 4

Climate Change makes now key time for new icebreakers GCaptain 11 U.S. Subcommittee: USCG Needs Icebreakers BY GCAPTAIN STAFF ON
DECEMBER 4, 2011 http://gcaptain.com/u-s-subcommittee-uscg-icebreakers/ As we all know, the ice caps are shrinking in the Arctic, effectively creating new coastline and navigable waters where the Coast Guard will be required to operate, said Chairman LoBiondo. This opening is already providing significant economic opportunities for the energy and maritime transportation sectors, but has also exposed a new set of risks and challenges to our national security and sovereignty. The Coast Guard maintains two Polar Class icebreakers however neither is currently operational. The POLAR SEA is being decommissioned and the POLAR STAR is undergoing significant repairs to extend its service life. Questions remain about how long the POLAR STAR will last after its repairs are complete, as well as whether the Service and the Administration are prepared to make critical decisions regarding our nations goals and objectives in the Arctic and provide Congress with a fiscally responsible plan to meet those goals and objectives. The Subcommittee has been talking about the Arctic for years and has continuously advocated for increased polar capabilities, LoBiondo continued. However, the Coast Guards ability to respond to emerging threats and emergencies in the Arctic is less today than it has been at any point in the past 50 years. Neither of the Polar Class icebreakers is currently operational, though the
taxpayer is spending millions of dollars a year to maintain those ships in a caretaker status. It is time that we stop wasting money on old, ineffective assets and focus instead on acquiring assets that will provide the capabilities we will need as we continue to increase our foothold in the Arctic.

We need to have an honest national conversation about what we want our involvement to be in the Arctic and what we need to do to maintain that presence.

38

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Arctic AdvWar Coming


The Arctic is a powder keg waiting to explode; many different countries want to control the territory in the arctic and the resources within them.
Carlson, Jon D.., Hubach, Chris., Long, Joe., Minteer, Kellen. and Young, Shane. 2009 (April 02 The Scramble for the Arctic: The United Nations Convention on the Law of the
Sea and Extending National Seabed Claims) http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p363540_index.html
Before beginning a discussion of various Arctic territorial claims, where geographic knowledge of landmarks and seabed descriptions is esoteric at best, a visual reference is undoubtedly helpful. One of the best visual representations of the regions is available through the International Boundaries Research Unit (IBRU) at Durham University, in the UK. [See Appendix 1] What becomes immediately apparent is that if

we view seabed claims as essentially territorial claims, and we recognize that conflicting territorial claims are a traditional basis for armed conflict, then the situation in the Arctic seems quite serious. This situation becomes even direr once the purported resource variable is added in to the equation, as countries are becoming more assertive with regard to securing access to strategic resources such as oil. The good news at least as far as avoiding potential armed conflict is that the debate about territory (and the subsidiary control over as-yet largely hypothetical petroleum deposits) is taking place within the institutional regulatory framework of the United Nations and the UNCLOS dispute-resolution mechanisms. Accordingly, the Scramble for the Arctic may be seen as a hard case for conflict resolution. Not only are the potential stakes high, but these stakes (territory and strategic resources) are at the heart of the realist behavioral model in IR: states generally seek to control territory as a defensive mechanism and prevent others from controlling necessary resources. If institutions and dispute-resolution mechanisms can constrain conflict here where very central
elements to state behavior are at stake and two of the players are acknowledged great powers then perhaps an idealist vision of IR is more appropriate for understanding state behavior in the contemporary international environment.

The dispute over the Arctic is heating up, and many countries have begun to attempt to exercise control over Arctic waters.
CBC News 2010 (August 20th, Battle for the Arctic heats up)
North. And Canada scrambles to defend territories it has ignored for too long.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2009/02/27/f-arctic-sovereignty.html

The Arctic is under siege as never before. The Russians send submarines deep below the North Pole. The Americans dispatch surveillance planes to monitor new threats in the

In 2007, the stakes were raised considerably when Russia launched a naval manoeuvre designed to plant an actual Russian flag, in a titanium capsule, at the base of the North Pole, 4,200 metres below sea level. Russia's game plan was to extend its territory almost up to the Pole itself, to claim the vast mineral and energy resources many feel lie underneath the Arctic ice. The North Pole is considered an international site and is administered by the International Seabed Authority. But if a country can prove its underwater shelf is an extension of its continental border, then it can claim an economic zone based on that. And that's what Russia is doing by systematically charting the reach of its Lomonosov
underwater shelf. As a spokesman for its Arctic and Antarctic Institute said, "It's like putting a flag on the moon." For Canadians, of course, this is more like waving a red flag in front of a bull. Canadians have always tended to regard the northernmost reaches of their land as an integral, if isolated, part of the country. The vast and frozen Arctic archipelago even gets its own reference in the country's national anthem: "The true north, strong and free." But how much of "Canada's North" is Canada's? Just about everyone

Who, if anyone, has jurisdiction over the waters separating Somerset Island from Devon Island, or Melville Island from Banks Island? The Canadian government says the jurisdiction is clear they're Canadian waters. But the U.S. and some other countries, especially now Russia, don't agree. They see the Northwest Passage as an international strait that any ship should be free to transit. And increasingly, they are seeing the Arctic seabed as a resource to be carved up among certain northern nations. Who is right?
agrees that the many islands that dot the Arctic to the north of Canada's mainland belong to Canada. But what about the water between them?

39

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Arctic AdvWar Coming


Countries are preparing for war
Apps, Political Risk Correspondent 12 (Pater, April 3,
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/03/us-arctic-resources-idUSBRE8320DR20120403, Reuters Melting Arctic may redraw global geopolitical map) But growing unease is also clear. Norway and Canada, for example, have spent recent years quietly re-equipping its military and moving troops and other forces to new or enlarged bases further north. Having largely withdrawn most of its forces from the region in the aftermath of the Cold War, officials and experts say the US is only now rediscovering its significance. But for now, Washington has no concrete plans to build even a single new icebreaker in part because experts estimate that the price tag for a single ship could be as high as $1 billion (R8bn). For the first time, some officers worry the US is losing its foothold as new rivals such as China prepare to muscle in. We are in many ways an Arctic nation without an Arctic strategy, US Coast Guard Vice-Admiral Brian M Salerno told the same Washington DC event.

Land disputes heighten tensions


Apps, Political Risk Correspondent 12 (Pater, April 3,
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/03/us-arctic-resources-idUSBRE8320DR20120403, Reuters Melting Arctic may redraw global geopolitical map) The US has yet to ratify the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), which most countries use as the basis formdiscussing thorny Arctic territorial issues. Arctic experts point to at least nine separate disputes within the region, from disagreements between the US and Canada over parts of the northwest passage to fishing conflicts that also drag in China, Russia, South Korea, Japan and others.

40

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Arctic AdvUS Falling Behind


US Posture towards the arctic in face of Russian expansionism is inadequate Cohen et. al 8 (Ariel, Lajos F. Szaszd, Jim Dolbow , a Senior Research Fellow for Russian and Eurasian Studies and
International Energy Policy, is a non staff member at The Heritage Foundation, Experienced Congressional Defense Staffer and Homeland Security Professional, The New Cold War: Reviving the U.S. Presence in the Arctic (http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2008/10/the-new-cold-war-reviving-the-us-presence-in-the-arctic BHS)

The U.S. requires a modern flotilla of icebreakers to conduct mapping and to sustain U.S. claims. The U.S. currently
through thicker ice, are at the end of their designed service life after operating for about 30 years.

has only three icebreakers that belong to the Coast Guard, of which only the Healy (commissioned in 2000) is relatively new. The other two icebreakers, while heavier than the Healy and thus capable of breaking

Yet even if the U.S. begins now, it will be eight to 10 years before a new icebreaker can enter service, and no money has been allocated to build a new-generation heavy icebreaker.[31] Russian Claims After its invasion of Georgia, Russia has clearly hardened its international posture and is increasingly relying on power, not international law, to settle its claims. Moscow has also intensified its anti-American policies and rhetoric and is likely to challenge U.S. interests whenever and wherever it can, including in the High North. Russia takes its role as an Arctic power seriously. In 2001, Russia submitted to the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea a formal claim for an area of 1.2 million square kilometers (460,000 square miles) that runs from the undersea Lomonosov Ridge and Mendeleev Ridge to the North Pole. This is roughly the combined area of Germany, France, and Italy.[32] The U.N. commission did not accept the claim and requested "additional data and information."[33] Russia responded by sending a scientific mission of a nuclear-powered icebreaker and two mini-submarines to the area. During this meticulously organized media event, the mission planted the Russian flag on the ocean's floor at the Lomonosov Ridge after collecting soil samples that supposedly prove that the ridge is part of the Eurasian landmass. During the mission, Deputy Chairman of the Russian Duma Artur Chilingarov, the veteran Soviet explorer heading the scientific expedition, declared, "The Arctic is ours and we should demonstrate our presence."[34] Such statements run counter to the spirit and potential of international cooperation and seem inappropriate for a scientific mission. The U.S. has objected to these claims and stated that they have "major flaws." Professor Timo Koivurova of the University of Lapland in Finland stated that "oceanic ridges cannot be claimed as part of the state's continental shelf."[35] Russia intends to resubmit its claim by 2009.[36] Russia is also moving rapidly to establish a physical sea, ground, and air presence in the Arctic. In August 2008, Russian President Dmitry
Medvedev signed a law that allows "the government to allocate strategic oil and gas deposits on the continental shelf without auctions." The law restricts participation to companies with five years' experience in a region's continental shelf and in which the government holds at least a 50 percent share, effectively allowing only state-controlled Gazprom and Rosneft to participate.[37] President Medvedev also featured the Arctic prominently in the new Russian Foreign Policy Concept, which states: "In accordance with the international law, Russia intends to establish the boundaries of its continental shelf, thus expanding

, Russian icebreakers have constantly patrolled in the Arctic. Russia has 18 operational icebreakers, the largest flotilla of icebreakers in the world.[39] Seven are nuclear, including the 50 Years of Victory, the largest icebreaker in the world.[40] Russia is planning to build new nuclear-powered icebreakers starting in 2015. Experts estimate that Russia will need to build six to 10 nuclear icebreakers over the next 20 years to maintain and expand its current level of operations.[41] Russia's presence in the Arctic will allow the Kremlin to take de facto possession of the underwater territories currently in dispute. In addition to
opportunities for exploration and exploitation of its mineral resources."[38] During 2008 icebreakers, Russia is constructing an Arctic oil rig in the northern shipbuilding center of Severodvinsk, which will be completed by 2010. The rig will be the first of its kind, capable of operating in temperatures as low as minus 50 degrees Celsius (minus 58 degrees Fahrenheit) and withstand the impact of ice packs. The new rig was commissioned by the state-controlled Gazprom and demonstrates that Russia is serious about oil exploration in the Arctic.[42] Russia's Polar Saber Rattling In August 2007, shortly after sending the scientific expedition to the Arctic ridge, then Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the resumption of regular air patrols over the Arctic Ocean. Strategic bombers including the turboprop Tu-95 (Bear), supersonic Tu-160 (Blackjack), and Tu-22M3 (Backfire) and the long-range anti-submarine warfare patrol aircraft Tu-142 have flown patrols since then.[43] According to the Russian Air Force, the Tu-95 bombers refueled in-flight to extend their operational patrol area.[44] Patrolling Russian bombers penetrated the 12-mile air defense identification zone surrounding Alaska 18 times during 2007.[45] Since August 2007, the Russian Air Force has flown more than 90 missions over the Arctic, Atlantic, and Pacific Oceans.[46]

The Russian Navy is also expanding its presence in the Arctic for the first time since the end of the Cold War.[47] Lieutenant General Vladimir Shamanov, head of the Defense Ministry's combat training department, said that the Russian Navy is increasing the operational
radius of the Northern Fleet's submarines and that Russia's military strategy might be reoriented to meet threats to the country's interests in the Arctic, particularly with regard to its continental shelf. Shamanov said that "we have a number of highly-professional military units in the Leningrad, Siberian and Far Eastern military districts, which are specifically trained for combat in Arctic regions."[48] On July 14, 2008,

the Russian Navy announced that its fleet has "resumed a warship presence in the Arctic." These Arctic naval patrols include the area of the Spitsbergen archipelago that belongs to Norway, a NATO member. Russia refuses to recognize Norway's right to a 200-nautical-mile exclusive economic zone around Spitsbergen. Russia deployed an anti-submarine warfare destroyer followed by a
guided-missile cruiser armed with 16 long-range anti-ship cruise missiles designed to destroy aircraft carriers.[49] The resumption of Cold Warstyle patrols and increased naval presence in the Arctic is in keeping with Moscow's more forward posture and is intended to increase its leverage vis--vis territorial claims. Moscow is taking a dual approach of projecting military power while invoking international law.

Regarding the naval deployments near Spitsbergen, the Russian Navy stated: Sorties of warships of the Northern Fleet will be made periodically with a necessary regularity. All actions of the Russian warships are fulfilled Russia's ambitious actions hearken back to 19th-century statecraft rather than the 21st-century law-based policy and appear to indicate that the Kremlin believes that credible displays of power will settle the conflicting territorial claims. By comparison, the West's posture toward the Arctic has been irresolute and inadequate.
Denmark, Norway, Russia, and the U.S., and the 1982 U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea.[51] While paying lip service to international law,

strictly in accordance with the international maritime law, including the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.[50] At a meeting of the Russian government's Maritime Board in April 2008, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov backed a policy of settling territorial disputes in the region with the countries bordering the Arctic through cooperation. First Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov, who is now deputy prime minister, stressed at the meeting that Russia observes the international law on the matter through adherence to "two international conventions": the 1958 Convention on the Continental Shelf, signed by Canada,

41

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Arctic AdvUS Falling Behind


U.S Navy and Coast Guard falling behind icebreakers key to restoring dominance
Wright 10 (January, Austin, reporter for POLITICO, Coast Guard Examines Future of
Patrolling The Arctichttp://www.nationaldefensemagazine.org/archive/2010/January/Pages/CoastGuardExa minesFutureofPatrollingTheArctic.aspx) The U.S. Navy and Coast Guard, which dwarf all other countries warship fleets in size and capability, have fallen behind several Arctic nations when it comes to patrolling these icy waters. Canada has announced plans for an Arctic training facility, China has sent an icebreaking ship to the North Pole and Russia already planted a flag there a symbolic gesture that the country maintains is not a claim to the land. Canada also has asserted control over parts of the Northwest Passage, an icy waterway that in recent years has become more navigable because of the retreating ice. Government studies have concluded that previously unreachable Arctic waterways could hold as much as one-fourth of the worlds undiscovered oil reserves, a statistic that leads some experts to believe there will be a conflict among the worlds naval powers for a stake in this potential jackpot. And the United States could find itself outmatched.

Actions must be taken now to seize the Arctic Canada and Russia are main competitors
Reiss has covered Arctic issues for Smithsonian, Parade and Outside Magazines, 2010 (Bob,
March 13, Cold, Hard Facts: U.S. Trails in Race for the Top of the World, Politics Daily, http://www.politicsdaily.com/2010/03/13/cold-hard-facts-u-s-trails-in-race-for-the-top-ofthe-world/)

That's not all the lumbering bear is up to. Russia is building floating nuclear power plants for its Arctic ports, and last year opened its northern route between Asia and Europe to two German commercial ships. Their trip from Korea to Holland made history, cutting the usual distance by 30 percent. A Russian icebreaker escorted the vessels. Russia is so protective of the region

that it routinely denies U.S. science missions access to Russian waters, complained Treadwell, head of the Arctic research commission. Meanwhile, the Russians plan to have 340 ice-strengthened vessels in the water by 2014. A State Department expert told me on background that Russia's aggressive moves are cosmetic, designed to make the country look strong for its domestic audience, and that Americans shouldn't take the bellicose language seriously. But Ariel Cohen, a Russia expert at the conservative Heritage Foundation, called the Russian claims "a time bomb ." And never mind old enemies; let's talk about old friends. Canada and the United States disagree on their offshore boundary in the Arctic and also over whether the Northwest Passage is owned by Canada, as Ottawa insists, or is an international passage, as the U.S. believes. So far the disagreement is friendly, but billions could be at stake as well as unencumbered passage of military ships. "Use the Arctic or lose it," Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has
said. Regardless of which countries emerge as Arctic powers, oil companies are anxious to know where boundaries are. "This will be the biggest land distribution in history," Paul Kelly, spokesman for the American Petroleum Institute, told me last year. As the clock ticks, Alaska Sen. Mark Begich, a Democrat, worries that "every day that goes by, we lose our sovereignty as

other countries recognize our inability to act." Perhaps Begich is remembering his Kipling. At the dawn of the 20th

century, writing about Central Asia, Rudyard Kipling described the way international issues play out in remote regions as "The Great Game." In the 21st century the northernmost regions will be the board on which the game is played. Think Saudi Arabia in 1880. Or the Isthmus of Panama before the canal was built. Those who got control of those places prospered while the losers gnashed their teeth. At the War College gathering last year, American and Canadian speakers showed slides depicting the different Arctic countries as animals reflecting their national character. Russia showed up as an aggressive bear. The U.S. appeared as a sleeping elephant.

42

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Arctic AdvRussia Dominating Now


Russia is reemerging as a hegemon recent statements and resources prove
Reiss has covered Arctic issues for Smithsonian, Parade and Outside Magazines, 2010 (Bob,
March 13, Cold, Hard Facts: U.S. Trails in Race for the Top of the World, Politics Daily, http://www.politicsdaily.com/2010/03/13/cold-hard-facts-u-s-trails-in-race-for-the-top-ofthe-world/) And Russia's resurgence as a world power has been aided by Arctic resources. But to remove those resources you have to own them, and nations are now scrambling to claim vast new areas of sea bottom. They can do so by proving them to be extensions of their continental shelves. In summer, U.S., Russian, Canadian, and Danish scientists aboard icebreakers conduct studies to support claims submitted to a U.N. commission. In theory, the U.S. could gain an undersea region as big as California. That's the good news, but the bad news is that the United States is last in the claims race. The U.N. Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf has begun examining claims from Russia and Norway, which could be granted before the U.S. formally
joins the process. Although the U.S. is gathering information for a claim, it cannot be submitted -- nor can the U.S. have a say in the claims of other nations -- until the government signs an international treaty. The agreement under which the apportionment of riches will go forward --

the 1982 Law of the Sea Convention -- lays out a comprehensive set of rules governing ocean issues, including protection of marine environments. All Arctic nations except the U.S. have signed. "If this were a ball game," one Coast Guard admiral told me, "the U.S. wouldn't be on the field or even in the stadium." What's the holdup? Ironically, in this era marked by fierce partisan politics, the treaty has had the backing of both the Obama White House and the Bush administration before it, along with oil and shipping industries, the Pentagon and even environmental groups such as the Sierra Club (which applauds the environmental protection provisions). The treaty's passage has been delayed by a few Republican Senators such as Louisiana's David Vitter, Jim while America dithers, Russia is emerging as top dog in the far north. The stakes go beyond include establishing a military hegemony that would give nightmares to Cold War strategists. In 2007, Russian explorer and legislator Artur Chilingarov -- with great symbolic, if not diplomatic or legal, authority -- dropped a titanium flag by mini sub at the North Pole. "The Arctic is ours," he said. Russia has claimed an area the size of France and Spain combined, but it is uncertain whether the claim will be granted. Russia operates 19 icebreakers while the U.S. Coast Guard has only two. Russia has beefed up its Arctic troops and begun military over-flights in the region for the first time since the Cold War, according to a recent Coast Guard report. "We are looking at how far the region will be militarized. Depending on that, we'll decide what to do," Gen. Nikolai Makarov, head of Russia's General Staff, said in 2009. Last summer, the U.S. Naval War College in Rhode Island hosted a conference on Arctic security concerns that was attended by military representatives from around the world. Fyodor Lukyanov, editor of Russia in Global Affairs, said that Russia defines the Arctic as a "national heritage" and identifies the region as "strong for military conflict over resources." The Norwegian delegation described Russian bomber sorties along Norway's coast, although the two countries are quite friendly at
meantime, trillions of dollars in potential oil and gas rights, fishing privileges, and shipping authority; they also the moment.

DeMint of South Carolina and Mississippi's Trent Lott, who worry that the treaty would provide a backdoor way for the U.N. to regulate U.S. military activity on the high seas, as well as U.S. environmental law. Lott also posits the treaty would impact American commercial authority: "When American businesses . . . invest time and money and effort for a . . . seabed discovery and want to make use of it, they then have to turn it over to a U.N. bureaucracy to decide who gets it and how it's shared with the rest of the world." In the

Russias security strategy ensures Arctic wars over resources Ariel Cohen 10 (Ph.D, June 15, 2010, In conjunction with the heritage foundation, From
Russian Competition to Natural Resources Access: Recasting U.S. Arctic Policy, http://thf_media.s3.amazonaws.com/2010/pdf/bg2421.pdf)
Russias Commercial Presence. Russias energy rush to the Arctic continues apace. On May 12, 2009, President Dmitry Medvedev approved

Russias security strategy. 34 This document views Russias natural resources in the Arctic as a base for both economic development and geopolitical influence. Paragraph 11 identifies potential battlegrounds where conflicts over energy may occur : The attention of international politics in the long-term will be concentrated on controlling the sources of energy resources in the Middle East, on the shelf of the Barents Sea and other parts of the Arctic, in the Caspian Basin and in Central Asia. The document seriously considers the use of military force to resolve competition for energy near Russias borders or those of its allies: In case of a competitive struggle for resources it is not impossible to discount that it might be resolved by a decision to use military might. The existing balance of forces on the borders of the Russian Federation and its allies can be changed.

43

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Arctic AdvRussia Dominating Now


Russia pushing for Arctic control now Revkin 8. Senior fellow at Pace University's Pace Academy for Applied Environmental
Studies. Andrew C. Revkin. A Push to Increase Icebreakers in the Arctic. August 17, 2008. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/17/world/europe/17arctic.html?_r=1&ref=world&pagewan ted=print A growing array of military leaders, Arctic experts and lawmakers say the United States is losing its ability to patrol and safeguard Arctic waters even as climate change and high energy prices have triggered a burst of shipping and oil and gas exploration in the thawing region. The National Academy of Sciences, the Coast Guard and others have warned over the past several years that the United States two 30-year-old heavy icebreakers, the Polar Sea and Polar Star, and one ice-breaking ship devoted mainly to science, the Healy, are grossly inadequate. Also, the Polar Star is out of service. And this spring, the leaders of the Pentagons Pacific Command, Northern Command and Transportation Command strongly recommended in a letter that the Joint Chiefs of Staff endorse a push by the Coast Guard to increase the countrys ability to gain access to and control its Arctic waters. In the meantime, a resurgent Russia has been busy expanding its fleet of large oceangoing icebreakers to around 14, launching a large conventional icebreaker in May and, last year, the worlds largest icebreaker, named 50 Years of Victory, the newest of its seven nuclearpowered, pole-hardy ships. Adm. Thad W. Allen, the commandant of the Coast Guard, who toured Alaskas Arctic shores two weeks ago with the homeland security secretary, Michael Chertoff, said that whatever mix of natural and human factors is causing the ice retreats, the Arctic is clearly opening to commerce and potential conflict and hazards like never before.

Russia seeking arctic military dominance


Macalister 7/6/12 Terry Macalister, Energy editor for the Guardian, The Guardian,
Militarisation: The 21st-century cold war hots up, http://www.lexisnexis.com/lnacui2api/results/docview/docview.do?docLinkInd=true&risb=21 _T15098984508&format=GNBFI&sort=BOOLEAN&startDocNo=1&resultsUrlKey=29_T15098 984512&cisb=22_T15098984511&treeMax=true&treeWidth=0&csi=138620&docNo=5 A buildup of military forces around the Arctic amid growing excitement about its oil wealth has the ability to undermine stability in the region, a research paper has warned. According to the report - called Climate Change and International Security: the Arctic as a Bellwether - the military buildup is neither advisable nor a sensible peacekeeping measure, as it is increasingly designed for combat rather than policing. The paper, published by the US not-for-profit organisation, the Centre for Climate and Energy Solutions (C2ES), warns: " Although the pursuit of co-operation is the stated priority, most of the Arctic states have begun to rebuild and modernise their military capabilities in the region. The new military programs have been geared towards combat capabilities that exceed mere constabulary capacity." It adds: "States such as Norway and Russia are building new naval units designed to engage in high-intensity conflicts. While this capability may be understood as prudent, the ability of rivals to intimidate or subdue with sophisticated weapons systems could, if collegiality falters, undermine diplomacy and stability in the region."
The US Geological Survey has estimated that about a quarter of the world's oil and gas reserves could lie under the ice cap - encouraging a race for resources. Shell has applied for drilling rights in the Arctic off Alaska this summer and is also planning to make boreholes on behalf of other oil companies off Greenland. Former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev

said in 2008 that "our first and main task is to turn the Arctic into Russia's resource base of the 21st century." His successor, Vladimir Putin, has just unveiled plans to give tax breaks to encourage companies to exploit new oil and gas fields, such as
the Shtockman field in the Barents Sea. Russia and Norway have recently signed a boundary agreement in the Barents Sea and undertaken joint military exercises, but the C2ES research paper says Norway

defence of the High North, as it calls it."

"continues to take seriously its preparations for the

44

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Arctic AdvIce Breakers Key


Melting ice spurs arctic militarization US needs to ramp up its icebreaking capabilities
Morello, 5/2. Lauren Morello, E&E reporter, May 2, 2012. ClimateWire.
http://eenews.net/public/climatewire/2012/05/02/1 Interest in the Arctic is growing as climate change shrinks the region's cap of sea ice, opening the area to new shipping, fishing, tourism and oil and gas exploration. But a new report from the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions (C2ES) warns that there are signs of creeping militarization that could disrupt the cooperation that has defined Arctic geopolitics since the end of the Cold War. It's a situation that lead author Rob Huebert, associate director of the Center for Military and Strategic Studies at the University of Calgary, described as "cooperation, but ... " The U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Healy is the United States' one functional icebreaker. With no plans to beef up a military presence in the Arctic, some experts worry the United States is in danger of falling behind. Photo courtesy of U.S. Coast Guard. "We've had intense periods of cooperation and liking each other in the Arctic," Huebert said yesterday, speaking at a conference organized by the American Geophysical Union. "Why? Because the stakes weren't that high." But that is changing as the world considers the economic potential of untouched shipping grounds, rich oil and gas deposits, new tourist attractions and long-sought commercial shipping routes. Since 2008, Canada, Denmark, Norway, Russia, the United States, the European Union, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and a coalition of Nordic countries have made major Arctic policy announcements. At the same time, NATO has increased the frequency of exercises it conducts in the Arctic, and non-Arctic nations are building icebreaking ships and developing their own polar strategies. "Even a little country like
Singapore is determined to become an Arctic state," Huebert said, adding that he met Singapore's Arctic ambassador at a science conference in Montreal last week. But that argument was rejected by a top U.S. military officer. Money driving politics "These border disputes will get solved, but it's all about the money," said Rear Adm. David Titley, oceanographer of the Navy. "It's the economics that will drive the time to see that."

Titley heads the Navy's Task Force Climate Change, which warned in a 2009 strategy paper that as rising temperatures open the Arctic to new shipping, fishing, tourism and resource extraction, the ensuing resource grab could increase the potential for competition and conflict between nations. But economic considerations can also prove a compelling reason to negotiate a peaceful solution to international conflicts, he said yesterday.

Heather Conley, director of the Europe Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, agreed, pointing to recent developments in the Barents Sea. Russia and Norway surprised the world in 2010 when they resolved a long-running border dispute in the region. The day after the two nations inked their new boundary agreement, each began seismic testing for oil and gas deposits on the Barents seabed. "The opportunities are driving good geopolitics here," Conley said. And the purchases of new planes, submarines and ships described in the new report as signs of militarization may not amount to new shows of fighting might, Titley said. No U.S. military buildup planned The analysis notes, for example, that the United States is replacing aging F-15 fighter planes stationed in Alaska with new F-22 Raptors. And the Navy has sent one of its newest Virginia-class submarines, the USS Texas, to the region on patrol. But looks can be deceiving, said Titley. With the Defense Department required by law to cut between $500

the United States and other countries are modernizing their fleets and infrastructure. That does not always bring a greater ability to operate in harsh Arctic conditions. The Navy's current submarines are not as capable of operating in polar ice as their 1970s predecessors, Titley said. And while Huebert remains convinced that creeping militarization could
billion and $1 trillion from its budget over the next decade, "we're not really looking at building up there," he said. Instead, he said, even within [Russian Prime Minister Vladimir] Putin's party."

jeopardize the friendly atmosphere that has taken root in the Arctic since the Cold War ended, he said the situation is not as dire as some media reports have suggested. A widely reported 2007 incident in which a Russian expedition planted a Russian flag on the ocean floor near the North Pole was "a publicity stunt -- by a member of the Duma who isn't

A greater concern, Huebert said, was the Russian Navy's decision in 2008 to conduct first-ever launch exercises in the Arctic with a batch of new missiles.
He's rooting for Arctic nations to strengthen their diplomatic ties by striking a prohibition that prevents the multination Arctic Council from discussing military matters. Does the U.S. need to catch up? Meanwhile,

experts agreed that the United States' Arctic ambitions are hobbled in at least two ways. First, the United States is one of a handful of nations -- including Iran, North Korea and Cuba -- that have not ratified the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea. The treaty, which took effect in 1994, allows member nations to apply to extract oil, gas and mineral deposits beyond a 200-mile exclusive economic zone -- if a country can show its continental slope extends beyond that point. Because it has not signed the agreement, the United States cannot file a claim to expand its EEZ or dispute claims made by other nations, including Canada and Russia. The other difficulty confronting the United States is a dwindling polar fleet, experts said. With just one functioning icebreaker and no immediate plans to build more, the United States is falling behind non-Arctic countries like China that are busy commissioning state-of-the-art vessels. "The economic potential of the Arctic is becoming more apparent," said Jay Gulledge, senior scientist and director of C2ES's science and impacts program. " And as that has happened, governments and industries have started to reposition themselves.

45

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Arctic AdvIce Breakers Key


Ice breakers key to heg; increases geopolitical power and science initiatives
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth and Life Studies
(DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World: An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs )

The United States has enduring national and strategic interests in the Arctic and Antarctic, and the importance of these regions is growing with time. In the north, the United States has territory and citizens above the Arctic Circle, creating significant national interests. In the south, the United States maintains three year-round scientific stations to assert U.S. presence and ensure U.S. leadership among the nations that are signatories to the Antarctic Treaty. Repeated highlevel policy reviews have reaffirmed the importance of this U.S. presence and leadership in the polar regions. To achieve national purposes in both polar regions, the nation needs to be able to access various sites throughout these regions at certain times of the year, reliably and at will. Ensured access to the polar region requires polar icebreaking ships capable of operating in a variety of challenging ice conditions. Over the past several decades, the U.S. government has supported its polar interests with a fleet of four icebreakers. The current seagoing U.S. fleet of four ships includes three multimission ships operated by the U.S. Coast Guard (POLAR SEA, POLAR STAR, and HEALY) that support U.S. Coast Guard missions as well as science and one single-mission ship operated by the National Science Foundation that is dedicated solely to scientific research (PALMER). Today, two of the multimission ships, the POLAR STAR and the POLAR SEA, are at the end of their service lives. Over the last decade, some routine maintenance on these ships has been deferred due to a lack of funds and no major life extension program has been planned; as a consequence, U.S. icebreaking capability is now at risk of being unable to support national interests in the north and the south.

Icebreakers are key to US arctic leadership- withdrawal causes power vacuums


National Research Council 7 . "2 U.S. Strategic Interests and Missions in the Polar
Regions."Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World: An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 2007. 1. Print. Until recently, the two Polar class icebreakers (sometimes together and sometimes separately depending on ice conditions) were used to break open a channel for resupply.4 However, more challenging ice conditions and the deteriorating status of the Polar class ships now adds uncertainty and risk of failure to the operation. The National Science Foundation (NSF) is concerned that the lack of reliable icebreaking support may make it increasingly difficult to maintain the permanent stations and associated science programs.
Investigations of alternate logistics plans by NSF (discussed in Chapter 8) have reaffirmed that icebreaker support is necessary to the Antarctic resupply chain for now and in the foreseeable future. According to a representative of the Department of State

assigned to Antarctic issues, if resupply of South Pole Station is not successful and the station were abandoned, this would jeopardize, and probably reduce, the influence of the United States in Antarctic governance.

There would be significant consequences because abandonment of that key site would create a vacuum in leadership and likely result in a scramble for control. Abandoning it would be detrimental to the U.S. position as well as to the stability of the treaty system. To preserve the U.S. presence in Antarctica and hence its influential role in the Antarctic Treaty, it is paramount to maintain the three permanent research stations and their associated active research programs throughout the Antarctic continent. Icebreaker

operations are critical to the continued existence of these stations and their associated outlying field sites

46

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Arctic AdvIce Breakers Key


Lack of icebreakers renders the US useless in the polar regions and cripples Coast Guard operations
ORourke, specialist in naval affairs, 6/14. Ronald ORourke Coast Guard Polar Icebreaker
Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress. Congressional Research Service. http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/weapons/RL34391.pdf

Should the Coast Guard not obtain funding for new icebreakers or major service life extensions for its existing icebreakers with sufficient lead-time, the United States will have no heavy icebreaking capability beyond 2020 and no polar icebreaking capability of any kind by 2029. Without the continued use of icebreakers, the United States will lose its ability to maintain a presence in the Polar Regions, the Coast Guards expertise to perform ice operations will continue to diminish, and missions will continue to go unmet.

Canada is strengthening its claim to artic waters, and the United States needs to respond in kind by building more icebreakers.
CBC News 2010 (August 20th, Battle for the Arctic heats up) http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2009/02/27/f-arcticsovereignty.html
Under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, which Canada ratified in 2003, coastal countries have the right to control access to the belt of shoreline along their coasts. Barring some exceptions, that belt is 12 nautical miles (22.2 kilometres) wide. But the waterways dividing some of the islands in Canada's north are often nearly 100 kilometres

Every country now controls the resources under its coastal waters up to 200 nautical miles from its shore. Under the treaty, a country's territory can be expanded much further if you can prove the ridges and rock formations underneath the water are connected to your continental shelf. But it's a race against time. Countries have 10 years from when they sign the treaty to submit their scientific data to a UN commission. Canada has just four years left
wide. That would seem to leave plenty of room down the middle for foreign ships. until 2013. Even if the world were to agree that Canada's Arctic waters are internal, a country might still lose the right to exercise absolute sovereignty over those waters if they include a "strait used for international navigation." Donald McRae, a law professor at the University of Ottawa, says

Canada must prove two things to win a sovereignty claim over its Arctic waters. "It must be demonstrated that the waters are the internal waters of Canada and that the waters of the Northwest Passage do not constitute an international strait," he wrote in a 1995 paper published by the Canadian Arctic Resources Committee. Canada is on record as saying it can satisfy both of those

requirements. Over the years, Canada has cited several reasons or precedents spelling out why its Arctic waters should be considered entirely "internal." An International Court of Justice ruling in 1951 established that the 12-mile limit could be extended in some instances. Countries could draw a straight baseline across coastal areas dotted with many islands and basically declare that all the water between that line and the mainland is internal, even if it lies outside the 12-mile limit. The ruling was about a case involving Norway, but some observers say Canada's geographic case is similar. Occupied territory When it comes to Arctic sovereignty, Canada also points out that the waters separating most of the islands in Canada's Arctic are frozen over most of the year. Inuit hunt and spend large amounts of time working and even living on the ice in effect turning it into an extension of the land. We also boast one of the few year-round sites of human habitation close to the North Pole at Alert, a military base at the northern tip of Ellesmere Island. A formidable presence, Alert is more than 700 kilometres north of the nearest Inuit town at Grise Fiord (and more than 4,300 kilometres north of Toronto, just to give an example of how far north it is.) But it is still 817 kilometres from the Pole, and the Russians are edging closer on that front as well. Since 1994, they have staffed year-round a research base called Ice Station Borneo on the deep Arctic ice, only 60 kilometres from the Pole. If ice counts for Canada's Inuit when it comes to international negotiations over the Arctic, then it might count for the Russian researchers as well. As for whether the waters of the Northwest Passage can be considered an international strait under maritime law, one study reported that there were just 11 foreign transits between 1904 and 1984. Because it has not been an international navigation or shipping route, many observers say it fails the required "use" test. But other analysts say Canada's sovereignty case is weak, and it might lose if tested in international courts. Even worse, the critics say, is that

Canada hasn't been doing enough to declare and enforce its jurisdiction. That explains the Harper government's moves to beef up Canada's presence in the North. During the 2005 election campaign, the Conservatives promised to buy three huge, armed icebreakers to patrol the melting Arctic seas,
build a deep-water port, and establish an Arctic warfare training centre.

47

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Arctic War Bad


High risk of Arctic conflictmultiple nations are ramping up their military and economic presence in the region to guarantee control
Hart et al. 12 Andrew Hart, doctoral candidate at the University of Colorado, Bruce Jones,
Senior Fellow and Director of the Managing Global Order Initiative at Brookings and NYUs Center on International Cooperation, and David Steven, Senior Fellow at NYUs Center on International Cooperation and leads MGOs Geopolitics of Scarcity Project, Chill Out: Why Cooperation is Balancing Conflict Among Major Powers in the New Arctic, Brookings, May 2012, http://www.brookings.edu/~/media/research/files/reports/2012/5/30%20arctic%20cooperati on%20jones/30%20arctic%20cooperation%20jones.pdf With so much at stake, interest in the Arctic is not only commercial, but once again strategic . While some
scientists now predict the region will experience largely ice-free summers within twenty years, 31 in the short term, navigation will pass through a series of new maritime choke points in the Bering Sea and in Canadas waterways. 32 Control of Arctic

navigation confers important political, economic and military leverage. There are also concerns that competition for energy reserves will become militarized, with U.S. maritime strategy identifying the potential for competition and conflict for access and natural resources. 33 The

United States and Canada have long clashed over the legal status of the Northwest Passage. Shortly after his election in 2006, the Canadian Prime Minister promised to assert Canadas jurisdiction over the islands, waterways and resources in the Arctic, 3 4 and argued that sovereignty had to be earned by having planes in the air, ships in the sea and, most importantly, boots on the ground. 35 Canadas Arctic Foreign Policy of 2011 takes a similar, if somewhat less confrontational, line. 36 Russian sabre rattling

has aroused the greatest fears. In 2007, Russian explorer and Presidential Envoy for the Arctic, Artur Chilingarov, led an expedition that planted a flag on the Arctic sea bed. He told the media that the North Pole is an extension of the Russian coastal shelf. 37 In 2008, the head of the Russian navy saw the potential for a future redistribution of power [in the Arctic], up to armed intervention. 38 A year
later, Russias new Arctic policy underlined the importance of securing sovereignty over the countrys strategic resource base in the region and of ensuring exclusive control over the Northern Sea Route. 39 Reacting to the building ill-will, the Center for a New American Security quipped that the only thing in the Arctic melting faster than the northern ice cap is the international comity. 40 A military reaction to increased tensions is now well underway. Although the classified nature of many decisions hampers observers from making a sound assessment of the evolving military balance, each

of the five major Arctic States (U.S., Canada, Denmark, Norway and Russia) is either rebuilding its Arctic capabilities or planning to do so in the near future. 41 In September 2011, Russia announced plans to deploy two brigades to the Arctic. 42 It has also ordered three nuclear and six diesel ice-breakers. 43 Russia has fired cruise missiles over the Arctic, resumed regular patrols of the region for the first time since the break-up of the USSR, and announced plans to augment its naval surface capabilities and its submarine force. 44,45 Canada is buying 65 F-35 Lightning II fighter aircraft in part to defend its Arctic sovereignty. 46 It is also expanding its Arctic fleet, building a flagship icebreaker that should be launched in 2017, 47 and developing ground satellite stations to enhance its surveillance of the region. 48 Denmark is establishing an Arctic Command that will eventually deploy F-16 aircraft to Greenland, while Norway has recently moved its military headquarters to a disused Cold War base in the Arctic 49 and, in building five frigates equipped with the Aegis combat system, has undertaken its largest ever military expenditure. 50

48

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Russia Dominance Bad


With resources from the arctic, Russia is poised to dominate the worlds oil and gas markets
Carlson, Jon D.., Hubach, Chris., Long, Joe., Minteer, Kellen. and Young, Shane. 2009 (April 02 The Scramble for the Arctic: The United Nations Convention on the Law of the
Sea and Extending National Seabed Claims) http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p363540_index.html
estimated that there There are many reasons for the Russian Federation to maximize their claim, as there is for any country with potential for expansion. What makes the Russian Arctic claims unique, however, is the scope of their potential. In 1999, the head of Russia's Ministry of the Environment, Viktor Orlov,

are 88 billion metric tonnes of hydrocarbon resources within the areas of the Arctic they already own and an additional 9 to 10 billion tonnes in the claims Russia has submitted to the UN ( & , 2007). Russia is already a world leader in the production of natural
Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates, and Venezuela. If

gas and oil exports. They hold the largest proven natural gas reserves in the world, followed by Qatar and Iran, and they produce more natural gas than any other country in the world (BP Statistical Review, 2008). In oil, they are out produced only by Saudi Arabia by a mere 1.8 million metric tonnes, which is within 99.6% of Saudi Arabia's total output. Russia also has the 7 th largest proven oil reserves, trailing behind the major OPEC members

Russia's proven reserves are combined with their estimated potential hydrocarbon resources in the Arctic, Russia has the potential to dominate the oil and gas markets in the near future, and become especially dominant in Europe, as they are a major supplier to Eastern Europe. Within the next 20 to 30 years, estimates predict enough melting of glacial
ice to allow for the extraction and use of the Arctic resources, which is a good time frame for Russia. However, the estimates of resources in the Arctic could be far off, as the data on the Russian Arctic territory only covers between 9 to 12% of seabed geological features, which may not be an efficient estimator of overall resources, in either over- or under-estimation (cf., Yenikeyeff & Krysiek, 2007)

49

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Sea Lanes AdvIce Blocking Now


Ice blocks critical sea routes to Alaska
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World: An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) During winter, the entire Alaskan northern coast and a substantial portion of the Alaskan western coast are ice bound. In summer the Arctic sea-ice margin retreats northward, although not uniformly or predictably, usually creating open waters along the entire coastline for several weeks to several months. Summer sea-ice extent is expected to continue to retreat over the next several decades, creating more broken ice along the Alaskan coastline.Economic activity is predicted to increase and move northward as a result of sea-ice retreat. Those deploying fishing fleets, cruise ships, mining, and the associated ore transit ships, as well as petroleum recovery and tanker ship transport, anticipate increased operations in the region. When current orders for ice-strengthened tankers have been filled, the worldwide fleet of these vessels will double in number. Ice retreat increases the cost-effectiveness of using the Northern Sea Route (primarily north of Russia) and the Northwest Passage (primarily north of Canada) for transporting petroleum, ore, and cargo. Both routes include U.S. Arctic waters.

50

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Sea Lanes AdvUS Losing Trade Routes Now


Chinas currently does not have clear policy defining their action in the arctic, but currently lean towards taking action
Campbell, USCC Policy Analyst on Foreign Affairs and Energy, 12 (Caitlin, April 13, 2012.
China and the Arctic: Objectives and Obstacles in the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission Staff Research Report http://www.uscc.gov/researchpapers/2012/Chinaand-the-Arctic_Apr2012.pdf) High-level officials in China have yet to make any significant policy announcements regarding the Arctic region. Chinas Assistant Minister of Foreign Affairs Hu Zhengyue stated in 2009 that China does not have an Arctic strategy,2 and no significant policies have been announced since then. However, a few mid-level officials in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the State Oceanic Administration have commented publicly on Chinas interests and activities related to the Arctic. Most of these official remarks or writings emphasize Chinas interests in environmental and climate change developments in the region. Official commentary has also stressed that Arctic states must ensure that the Arctic remains a global commons, with non-Arctic states having access to the region and its resources.3 To date, official Chinese comments on the Arctic have been limited to noting the importance of the Arctic to China and the value of open access to the region for all. At a 2009 Arctic forum in Norway, Assistant Minister of Foreign Affairs Hu emphasized that the Arctic impacts Chinas environment, economy, society, and consequently, the trajectory of its sustainable development, noting, the government of China is, therefore, greatly concerned about Arctic issues.4 Hu also expressed that China respected the territorial rights of Arctic countries, but also warned that Arctic countries should protect the balance between the interests of states with shorelines in the Arctic Ocean and the shared interests of the international community in settling territorial claims. Some western analysts suggest that this comment reflects Chinese anxieties about being denied access to Arctic waterways by
Arctic countries. This is reflected also in a 2010 article published by Chinas State Oceanic Administration, which concludes that the Arctic is the inherited wealth of all humankindThe Arctic Ocean is not the backyard of any country and is not the private property of the Arctic Ocean littoral states. As with Europes other oceans, under the framework of international law, every country in the world has an equal right to exploit the Arctic Ocean.5

The US is falling behind in the race for trade routes Koring, International affairs and security correspondent 11 (Paul, winner of Amnesty
Internationals award for human rights journalism and the Globes Richard Doyle award for reporting September, The Globe and Mail Canadian icebreaker joins the polar parade; Massive loss of ice cover has made High Arctic passages much easer and stoked the race for trade ro utes lexis) Russia With four nuclear-powered leviathans, Russia remains the unchallenged superpower of Arctic icebreaking .
Another half-dozen smaller, conventionally powered icebreakers round out the fleet. Moscow just ordered six more, including three advanced nuclear-powered versions. The nuclear-powered Artika class, 160 metres long and 25,000 tonnes, dwarfs everything else in the Arctic. United States Like Canada,

the U.S. Coast Guard is awaiting long-promised icebreaker replacements that are still marooned on the drawing board. America's two largest icebreakers; the Polar Star and Polar Sea, both need replacing. For now, the Coast Guard's relatively new, China's polar ambitions seem unbounded. Beijing wants a seat at the Arctic Council table, has developed a powerful polar presence and is exploring new export trade routes.
of its surveillance when it appeared off Tuktoyaktuk, far inside Canada's claimed territorial waters, in 1999.

powerful and sophisticated icebreaker Healy is America's icebreaking flagship. China China's Xue Long (Snow Dragon) caught Canada by surprise - and exposed the inadequacy

51

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Sea Lanes AdvUS Losing Trade Routes Now


Arctic key growing trade, the US needs to catch up
Hambling, 12 (David, http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/2012/jan/11/weatherwatch-arcticicebreakers-trade, January 11 Weatherwatch: Trade traffic in Arctic waterways is increasing) As Arctic ice gets thinner, you could expect that icebreakers would become less important. However , the volume of traffic in Arctic waterways is now increasing, and with it the demand for ships that can navigate ice-covered waters. President Putin of Russia has suggested that the Arctic sea could overtake the Suez Canal in trade volume, as it offers a short route from Europe to the Asian Pacific, and he wants more icebreakers to escort convoys. In winter, the ice cover in the Arctic Ocean can be up to two and a half metres thick. Nuclear powered icebreakers can force
a passage through this at up to 10 knots, leaving a path clear for other vessels. Thinner ice in other seasons or farther south can be traversed more quickly. Ships trapped in ice can only be rescued by icebreakers , and they are also the only vessels able to help with oil spills in frozen conditions. The Russians have seven nuclear icebreakers and proposals to build three more. They also possess several non-nuclear icebreakers. The US Coast Guard has just three heavy (non-nuclear) icebreakers, and there are plans to decommission two of them. Mead

Treadwell, Lieutenant Governor of Alaska, fears that the US is being left behind. He wants more Coast Guard icebreakers, not just for emergency rescue, but also to boost international trade . "A couple of icebreakers at $750m (484m) or so apiece can actually open up a major sea route for global commerce," he said.

China is preparing to expand into the Arctic


States News Service 5/9. May 9, 2012. COAST GUARD: U.S. SHOULD HAVE 3 HEAVY, 3
MEDIUM ICEBREAKERS ADMIRAL PAPP OPEN TO "LEASING OPPORTUNITIES" BEFORE FUTURE SHIPS ARE BUILT, ALASKA "LUCKED OUT" THAT HEALY WAS AVAILABLE FOR NOME MISSION. http://www.lexisnexis.com/lnacui2api/auth/checkbrowser.do?rand=0.6300832076938608&cookieState =0&ipcounter=1&bhcp=1

China Prepares for an Ice-free Arctic Chinas expanding polar research capabilities, describes its commercial interests in summertime trans-Arctic voyages, and comments on the nations diverse views on engagement with the Arctic states. 6 Many others see Chinas real interests in terms of access to the regions immense natural-resource wealth.
The Stockholm International Peace Research Institutes March 2010 release of a report t itled received global media attention. This report reviews

All major powers are running to claim trade routes Koring, International affairs and security correspondent 11 (Paul, winner of Amnesty
Internationals award for human rights journalism and the Globes Richard Doyle award for reporting September, The Globe and Mail Canadian icebreaker joins the polar parade; Massive loss of ice cover has made High Arctic passages much easer and stoked the race for trade routes lexis) Meanwhile, other nations, notably China, South Korea and Russia, all with an eye on Arctic trade routes as well as polar research, have built and launched big icebreakers. Russia has added to its already world-beating icebreaker fleet. "These other nations get it in terms of climate change," said Michael Byers, referring to the icebreaker building boom and the concerted effort to get vessels into the High Arctic for research. "It should send a strong signal to Canada about the seriousness of these other countries," added Prof. Byers, who holds the Canada Research Chair in Global Politics and International Law at the University of British Columbia. But the race to the Arctic is only partially about research. Untold oil wealth, the prospect of new, if seasonal, trade routes have turned the top of the world into the 21st-century version of The Great Game, with major powers jockeying for influence. Exxon anted up billions for risky Arctic Russian drilling rights this week, and the large tankers - escorted by (unneeded) icebreakers sailed the shortcut across the top of Russia this summer.

52

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Sea Lanes AdvIce Breakers Key


Developing sea lanes of transit through the Arctic creates massive cost reductions in shippingspills over globally
Scott G. Borgerson, International Affairs Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and a former Lieutenant Commander in the U.S. Coast Guard, Arctic Meltdown: The Economic and Security Implications of Global Warming, Foreign Affairs, March/April 2008, http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/63222/scott-g-borgerson/arctic-meltdown# An even greater prize will be the new sea-lanes created by the great melt. In the nineteenth century, an Arctic seaway represented the Holy Grail of Victorian exploration, and the seafaring British
Arctic sea

Empire spared no expense in pursuing a shortcut to rich Asian markets. Once it became clear that the Northwest Passage was ice clogged and impassable, the Arctic faded from power brokers' consciousness. Strategic interest in the Arctic was revived during World War II and the Cold War, when nuclear submarines and intercontinental missiles turned the Arctic into the world's most militarized maritime space, but it is only now that the

routes so coveted by nineteenth century explorers are becoming a reality. The shipping shortcuts of the Northern Sea Route (over Eurasia) and the Northwest Passage (over North America) would cut existing oceanic transit times by days, saving shipping companies-not to mention navies and smugglers-thousands of miles in travel. The Northern Sea Route would re duce the sailing distance between Rotterdam and Yokohama from 11,200 nautical miles-via the current route, through the Suez Canal-to only 6,500 nautical miles, a savings of more than 40 percent. Likewise, the Northwest Passage would a voyage from Seattle to Rotterdam by 2,000 nautical miles, making it nearly 25 percent shorter than trim the current route, via the Panama Canal. Taking into account canal fees, fuel costs, and other variables that determine freight rates, these shortcuts could cut the cost of a single voyage by a large container ship by as much as 20 percent-from approximately $17.5 million to $14 million-saving the shipping industry billions of dollars a year. The savings would be even greater for the megaships that are unable to fit through the Panama and Suez Canals and so currently sail around the Cape of Good Hope and Cape Horn. Moreover, these Arctic routes would also allow commercial and military vessels to avoid sailing through politically unstable Middle Eastern waters and the pirate-infested South China Sea. An Iranian provocation in the Strait of Hormuz, such as the one
that occurred in January, would be considered far less of a threat in an age of trans-Arctic shipping. Arctic shipping could also dramatically affect global trade patterns. In 1969, oil companies sent the S.S. Manhattan through the Northwest Passage to test whether it was a viable route for moving Arctic oil to the Eastern Seaboard. The Manhattan completed the voyage with the help of accompanying icebreakers, but oil companies soon deemed the route impractical and prohibitively expensive and opted instead for an Alaskan pipeline. But today such voyages are fast becoming economically feasible. As

soon as marine insurers recalculate the risks involved in these voyages, trans-Arctic shipping will become commercially viable and begin on a large scale. In an age of just-in-time delivery, and with increasing fuel costs eating into the profits of shipping companies, reducing long-haul sailing distances by as much as 40 percent could usher in a new phase of globalization. Arctic routes would force further competition between the Panama and Suez Canals, thereby reducing current canal tolls; shipping chokepoints such as the Strait of Malacca would no longer dictate global shipping patterns; and Arctic seaways would allow for greater international economic integration. When the ice recedes enough, likely within this decade, a marine highway directly over the North Pole will materialize. Such a route, which would most likely run between Iceland and Alaska's Dutch Harbor, would connect shipping megaports in the North Atlantic with those in the North Pacific and radiate outward to other ports in a hub-and-spoke system. A fast lane is now under development between the
Arctic port of Murmansk, in Russia, and the Hudson Bay port of Churchill, in Canada, which is connected to the North American rail network.

53

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Sea Lanes AdvIce Breakers Key


Icebreakers key to defense readiness, polar environmental monitoring, and trade waterways
ORourke, specialist in naval affairs, 6/14. Ronald ORourke Coast Guard Polar
Icebreaker Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress. Congressional Research Service. http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/weapons/RL34391.pdf ***[The study] concludes that future capability and capacity gaps will significantly impact four [Coast Guard] mission areas in the Arctic: Defense Readiness, Ice Operations, Marine Environmental Protection, and Ports, Waterways, and Coastal Security. These mission areas address the protection of important national interests in a geographic area where other nations are actively pursuing their own national goals.... The common and dominant contributor to these significant mission impacts is the gap in polar icebreaking capability. The increasing obsolescence of the Coast Guards icebreaker fleet will further exacerbate mission performance gaps in the coming years.... The gap in polar icebreaking capacity has resulted in a lack of at-sea time for crews and senior personnel and a corresponding gap in training and leadership. In addition to providing multi-mission capability and intrinsic mobility, a helicopter-capable surface unit would eliminate the need for acquiring an expensive shore-based infrastructure that may only be needed on a seasonal or occasional basis. The most capable surface unit would be a polar icebreaker. Polar icebreakers can transit safely in a variety of ice conditions and have the endurance to operate far from logistics bases. The Coast Guards polar icebreakers have conducted a wide range of planned and unscheduled Coast Guard missions in the past. Polar icebreakers possess the ability to carry large numbers of passengers, cargo, boats, and helicopters. Polar icebreakers also have substantial command, control, and communications capabilities. The flexibility and mobility of polar icebreakers would assist the Coast Guard in closing future mission performance gaps effectively.... 17 For examples Future gaps may involve an inability to carry out probable and easily projected mission requirements, such as the McMurdo resupply, or readiness to respond to less-predictable events. By their nature, contingencies requiring the use of military capabilities often occur quickly. As is the case in the Arctic, the deterioration of the Coast Guards icebreaker fleet is the primary driver for this significant mission impact. This will further widen mission performance gaps in the coming years. The recently issued Naval Operations Concept 2010 requires a surface presence in both the Arctic and Antarctic. This further exacerbates the capability gap left by the deterioration of the icebreaker fleet.... The significant
future Coast Guard performance in two Antarctic mission areas: Defense Readiness and Ice Operations.

of bill and report language in recent years relating to the study of Coast Guard missions and capabilities for operations in high latitude areas, see Appendix C. Coast Guard Polar Icebreaker Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress Congressional Research Service 9 Existing capability and capacity gaps are expected to significantly impact

deterioration of the Coast Guard icebreaker fleet and the emerging mission demands to meet future functional requirements in the high latitude regions dictate that the Coast

icebreaking fleet must be capable of supporting the following missions: Arctic North Patrol. Continuous multimission icebreaker presence in the Arctic. Arctic West Science. Spring and summer science support in the Arctic. Antarctic, McMurdo Station resupply. Planned deployment for break-in, supply ship escort, and science support. This
Guard acquire material solutions to close the capability gaps.... To meet the Coast Guard mission functional requirement, the Coast Guard complete any Freedom of Navigation exercises in the region. In addition, the joint Naval Operations Concept establishes the following mission requirements:

mission, conducted in the Antarctic summer, also requires standby icebreaker support for backup in the event the primary vessel cannot complete the mission. Thule Air Base Resupply and Polar Region Freedom of Navigation Transits. Provide vessel escort operations in support of the Military Sealift Commands Operation Pacer Goose; then

access and assertion of U.S. policy in the Polar Regions. The current
presence in both Polar Regions.

Assured

demand for this mission requires continuous icebreaker

54

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Sea Lanes AdvIce Breakers Key


Drilling procedure in the Arctic requires the aid of icebreakers
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World:An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs )
drilled annually over the next five years (Elmer Danenberger, personal communication). To

It is not possible to accurately predict the level of oil and gas activity that will occur in the U.S. Arctic over the next decade because oil prices, exploration, and development activity onshore and State of Alaska offshore areas adjacent to the OCS and in the Canadian Beaufort Sea influence the rate and level of activity. However, the U.S. Minerals Management Service (MMS) anticipates that between one and three exploratory wells will be

support resource exploration efforts, the MMS anticipates multiple geophysical (seismic) surveys to occur in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas over the next several years during the open-water seasons. Up to four seismic vessels could be operating in any one year. In addition, MMS expects that up to two ice-reinforced floating drilling units will be operating simultaneously in the Beaufort and/or Chukchi Sea during open-water conditions. Drilling operations could extend into the early fall freeze-up conditions. Each drilling operation would be supported by an icebreaker to provide ice management during drilling and to assist in demobilization to over wintering harbors at the end of the drilling season. Additionally, up to two ice class vessels and icereinforced barges could be staged in the Beaufort Sea during drilling to support oil spill response operations.

New icebreakers key to trade routes and jobs now is key time to maintain presence in artic
Young 2011 Don U.S. Rep. testified in hearing to examine the U.S. Coast Guards role and
operations in the Arctic.: U.S. Subcommittee: USCG Needs Icebreakers BY GCAPTAIN STAFF ON DECEMBER 4, 2011 http://gcaptain.com/u-s-subcommittee-uscg-icebreakers/
latitudes. As the sole Arctic representative in the United States, I have made it my mission to ensure that we move decisively to protect our interests in the high

The Northwest Passage is becoming an increasingly viable shipping route and could soon offer a more economical route between the Pacific and Atlantic oceans than the Panama Canal. Additionally the combination of improved technology and easier access to the continental shelf in the Arctic has allowed us greater access to vast deposits of valuable natural resources. The Arctic offers jobs, energy, and money, three things this country desperately needs right now. While we have been given this great opportunity, it does not come without competition, Young continued. Other nations are increasing their claims in the Arctic daily. We need to maintain an active presence there to protect our waters and our national sovereignty.

New ice breakers are key to trade US interests


Venzke Retired Rear Admiral, U.S. Coast Guard 9 (Norm, icebreaker sailor, severed on four
icebreakers, March, http://www.michaelyon-online.com/images/pdf/icebreakers.pdf, We Need More Icebreakers!)
from damage and delays and can only operate in one place at a given time. Operations in the western Arctic involve the fulfilling of statutory requirements and the need for both research and a national presence in an area of increased international interest. Apparently, the Healy is deemed adequate for the current level of operations. But she is only one ship, not immune

Given that diminishing ice will result in increased foreign shipping in the United States area of interest, its obvious that an additional icebreaker will be needed. Now is the time to plan for that vessel with recognition that even more might be required to support our future requirements. Presumably, the Canadian Coast Guard will continue providing icebreaker
support for the annual Thule (Greenland) Air Base resupply as long as it is needed. If not, additional icebreaker support would be necessary for that mission.

55

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Sea Lanes AdvArctic Region Key


U.S. cant be left behind, opportunity for trade and economic gro wth in Northern sea ways
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World: An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) Economic activity is predicted to increase and move northward as a result of sea-ice retreat. Those deploying fishing fleets, cruise ships, mining, and the associated ore transit ships, as well as petroleum recovery and tanker ship transport, anticipate increased operations in the region. When current orders for ice-strengthened tankers have been filled, the worldwide fleet of these vessels will double in number. Ice retreat increases the cost-effectiveness of using the Northern Sea Route (primarily north of Russia) and the Northwest Passage (primarily north of Canada) for transporting petroleum, ore, and cargo. Both routes include U.S. Arctic waters. The potential for increased human activity in northern latitudes will likely increase the need for the United States to assert a more active and influential presence in the Arctic not only to protect its territorial interests, but also to project its presence as a world power concerned with the security, economic, scientific, and international political issues of the region.

The Arctic is home to much of the worlds untapped energy reserves


NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World:An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) The Arctic has long been viewed as a likely source of natural resources such as oil, gas, minerals, ores, and other commodities. Indeed, U.S. West Coast Refineries are fueled primarily by Arctic oil produced on Alaskas North Slope. In 2005, approximately 335 million barrels of oil was produced on Alaskas North Slope (State of Alaska Department of Resources). There is further expectation that additional large volumes of recoverable oil are to be found in the Arctic National Wildlife Reserve, although environmental concerns and political pressures have blocked development to date. Alaskas North Slope has large proven natural gas reserves that have not been developed in commercial quantities as of yet. The principal producers (ExxonMobil, BP, and ConocoPhillips) are planning to
build a pipeline for moving Alaska North Slope gas directly to the U.S. Midwest.

Tensions heightening could lead to war Revkin, senior fellow at the Pace Academy for Applied Environmental Studies at Pace University, 8 (Andrew, August 19, The International Herald Tribune Russian icebreakers
challenge U.S. role in Arctic lexis) the United States is losing its ability to patrol and safeguard Arctic waters even as climate change and high energy prices have triggered a burst of shipping and oil and gas exploration. In the meantime, a resurgent Russia has been busy expanding its fleet of large oceangoing icebreakers to
A growing array of American military leaders, Arctic experts and lawmakers say about 14. It launched a large conventional icebreaker in May and, last year, the world's largest icebreaker, named 50 Years of Victory, the newest of its seven nuclear-powered, pole-hardy ships. The U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the Coast Guard and others have warned over the last several years that old heavy the Polar Sea and Polar Star, and one smaller ice-breaking ship devoted mainly to science, the Healy, . Also, the Polar Star is out of service. And this spring, the leaders of the Pentagon's Pacific Command, Northern Command and Transportation Command strongly recommended

icebreakers,

the United States' two 30-yearare grossly inadequate

a fresh push by the Coast Guard to increase the United States' ability to gain access to and control its Arctic waters. Admiral Thad Allen, the commandant of the Coast Guard, who toured Alaska's Arctic shores two weeks ago with the homeland security secretary, Michael Chertoff, said that whatever mix of natural and human factors is causing the ice retreats, the Arctic
in a letter that the Joint Chiefs of Staff endorse

is clearly opening to commerce - and potential conflict and hazards - like never before .

56

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Sea Lanes AdvA2: US-China Econ Coop Solves


China seeks a partner for harnessing arctic energy and bids currently dont include the US
Campbell, USCC Policy Analyst on Foreign Affairs and Energy, 12 (Caitlin, April 13, 2012.
China and the Arctic: Objectives and Obstacles in the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission Staff Research Report http://www.uscc.gov/researchpapers/2012/Chinaand-the-Arctic_Apr2012.pdf) In 2008, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) estimated that the Arctic contains up to 30 percent of the worlds undiscovered gas and 13 percent of the worlds undiscovered oil resources.14 These untapped resources will become more readily accessible as Arctic sea ice melts. According to the USGS, most of the potential oil and gas resources in the region are located within the territorial jurisdiction of Arctic states, and will thus be subject to the management and legal oversight of those countries.15 Chinas territorial disadvantage, combined with its lack of cold-water drilling expertise, will preclude any substantive energy acquisitions by China in the Arctic, according to several analysts.16 Still, there will be attractive opportunities for Chinese energy investments in the region. A promising destination for these investments is Russia. China and Russia already have extensive energy ties and could cooperate on Arctic energy as well.** Speaking at the 2010 Shanghai Expo, the governor of the Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous region in Russia - a
coastal region which accounts for over 90 percent of Russian natural gas production - welcomed resource cooperation with China, saying *w+e are ready to act as intermediaries between an investor country and the oil and gas sector and create a good investment climate.17

Another potential partner for Chinas Arctic energy ambitions is Canada. In recent years, Chinese energy investments in Canada have grown significantly, with Chinese state-owned companies purchasing minority and controlling stakes in Canadian oil and gas projects worth $16 billion in 2010 and 2011. 18 Meanwhile,
Canadian policymakers seem to be looking to Asia to diversify the countrys energy trade away from the United States (which is the destination for the vast majority of Canadian energy exports).19

Norway is another likely partner on energy. During meetings of the Bilateral Dialogue on Arctic Issues between China and Norway, discussions have been held on energy and resource issues. Norways cold-water drilling expertise will likely be targeted by Chinese energy firms looking to gain know-how and investment.20 However, some While gaining permanent observer status will not allow China any decision-making powers in the region, it would grant China unrestricted access to Arctic Council meetings.22
expressing support for Chinas application for permanent observer status.21

reports suggest that current diplomatic tensions between Norway and China might hinder these collaborative efforts. Since the Oslo-based Nobel Committee awarded Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo the Nobel Peace Prize in 2010, China has stalled or halted economic and diplomatic relations between the two countries. It has been reported that in response to Chinas behavior, Norway might block Beijings attempts to gain permanent observer status in the Arctic Council, a high -level intergovernmental regional forum that addresses environmental, resource, and climate issues in the Arctic. These reports contradict a recent foreign policy address by Norways Minister of Foreign Affairs,

57

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Sea Lanes AdvShipping Routes GoodEconomy


Economic dominance of the Arctic strengthens trade and primacy key to control
Wegge, Department of political science, University of Troms, 10 (Njord, March, 2010. The
political order in the Arctic: power structures, regimes and influence http://byers.typepad.com/files/wegge-on-ir-theory-and-arctic-1.pdf) Economic strength. Economic strength could be moulded into relevant capacities. This ductile and indirect role makes the states general economic strength relevant. Economic strength could also create patterns of dependency or be used to reward desired behaviour. The following frequently used indicators of a states economic strength: GDP, GDP per capita a nd share of world trade, are applied. Administrative capacity. Administrative capacities indicate an ability to develop and execute policy. Measuring this capacity in the Arctic is difficult. However, two key elements provide an indication and will be employed in the analysis: the existence of governmental structures focusing primarily on Arctic issues, and general institutional efficiency. Control over natural resources and territories. Both control over natural resources and control over
territories are directly linked to state sovereignty and stand out as relevant sources of power, which mitigates physical presence and the utilisation of raw materials.

Arctic trade key to international commerce


Borgerson, Council on Foreign Relations, 9 (Scott, May 2009. The National Interest and the
Law of the Sea)
The world has changed dramatically in the last half century, making the legal tools and protections the convention provides essential for the United States to shape and influence the security environment of the twenty-first century. The political polarization of the Cold War has yielded to a rise of both nations and nationalism. In 1958, there were eighty-two members of the United Nations; today there are 192. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the Americas bedrock national security alliance, has grown from fifteen member nations to twenty-six members and twenty-four partners. While the threat of international conventional and nuclear war has diminished, the transnational threats of WMD proliferation and violent extremism by nonstate interests with international reach have mushroomed. Expanding populations, combined with the growth of the newly industrialized economies, have fueled an increasing demand for and competition over natural resources. The energy security of the United States and every

major world economy now depends on a global fuel market in which half of the worlds oil travels by sea, with most passing through a handful of strategic straits. Global commerce is the cornerstone of every nations economic security, with approximately 90 percent of both international physical and electronic trade traveling across the sea in ships or under the sea in cables.17 Changes in politics and economics have been matched or exceeded by changes in the physical world. Readily exploited reserves of oil and gas have been depleted. Entire species of highly valued apex predators, like tuna, and less palatable but economically critical forage fish, like menhaden, are collapsing. Meanwhile, a warming climate is opening the Arctic Ocean to navigation, providing access
to previously unreachable resources and bringing about competing jurisdictional claims over this frontier.

58

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Sea Lanes AdvShipping Routes GoodHegemony


The US must maintain a strategic hold on resource shipping routes in the Arctic in order to avoid resource wars and hegemony
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World:An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) The average demand for oil in China and India is expected to grow by approximately 4 percent per year until 2020, increasing Asias foreign oil dependence from 69 percent (1997) to 87 percent in 2020 (gt, 2003). In addition, Chinas need for natural gas will out strip its own resources and will force new energy agreements, most likely with Russia in the near future (gt, 2003). In anticipation of the increased demand for oil and potential economic
and environmental changes, China has begun building strategic relationships to secure the sea lanes from the Middle East to the South China Sea to ensure unimpeded delivery of oil (gt, 2003). Instability

in the Middle East, coupled with increased demand in Asia, may make Arctic oil reserves more economically attractive, spurring further oil exploration, development, and production. Chinese demand for these resources may fundamentally alter shipping patterns if the Arctic sea ice recedes and the Arctic routes become routinely navigable (Hanna, 2006). With potential access to the Northern Sea Route and the Northwest Passage at certain times of the year, the Chinese may pursue these northern routes. In support of national interests, the United States currently patrols the Straits of Malacca and Hormuz and is prepared to defend these important shipping lanes, but if transit routes develop in the Arctic, the United States must be prepared to patrol and defend these routes equally (Hanna, 2006).

59

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Sea Lanes AdvShipping Routes GoodPiracy


Empirics show that the northwestern passage is faster, less expensive, and completely avoid threats of piracy
Sweeney 11 (Capt. Kelly, 8/29. Professional Mariner, Arctic update: Maritime 'gold rush'
heats up in the northern passages, http://www.professionalmariner.com/September2011/Arctic-update-Maritime-gold-rush-heats-up-in-the-northern-passages/) In 1997, the Finnish-flag ice-class tanker Uikku became the first commercial ship to cross the passage along the northern coast of Russia. Since then, a number of commercial ships have used the route - including cruise ships running from Anchorage, Alaska, to Helsinki, Finland. The economic benefits of using the Northeast Passage are striking. Last summer the Danish bulker, Nordic Barents, took a 40,000-ton load of iron ore from Norway across the passage, through the Bering Strait and then down to China. The trip took 33 percent less time and saved thousands of miles in distance, thereby reaping nearly $200,000 in fuel savings alone - compared to a conventional sea route to China. Even better, taking the passage allowed the ship to completely avoid the Suez Canal and the high-risk piracy areas off of Somalia.

Without Icebreakers companies are forced to travel through the pirate infested Suez Canal rather than the safer northwestern passage
Bennet 11 (Mia, 8/24. Alaska Dispacth, Is the Northwest Passage 'too small' to compete with
the Northern Sea? http://www.alaskadispatch.com/article/northwest-passage-too-smallcompete-northern-sea)
it's not entirely true, however, that Canada is "too small" to develop the Northwest Passage. In fact, economically speaking, it has a slightly larger GDP than Russia, though it does have a lot fewer people, especially in the Arctic. Its problems stem more from geography and politics. Geographically, the Northwest Passage has several disadvantages. First of all, there isn't one clear route through the many islands in the Canadian Archipelago, whereas the Northern Sea Route mostly follows the northern coast of Russia. Additionally, Canada has very little infrastructure near the Northwest Passage. Towns and settlements along the route, like Cambridge Bay and Resolute, are only reachable from the rest of Canada by plane. Favorably for Russia, Murmansk, an ice-free port and large city with a direct rail link to St. Petersburg, sits on the Northeast Passage. Even though the two routes are at similar latitudes a little bit south of 70N, the

Northwest Passage is generally more covered by ice than its counterpart. In Canada, recent changes in melting have not been thoroughly mapped for shipping purposes, either. Since Canada does not have the icebreakers necessary to guide ships through the treacherous passage, companies have been reluctant to transfer their shipping traffic from the Suez Canal to the Northwest Passage, despite how ferocious the Somali pirates have become.

Increase in arctic trade reduces emissions and reliance on fossil fuels, as well as combats piracy
Macallister 11 (Terry, July 5. Thawing Arctic opens up new shipping routes on the 'roof of
the world The Guardian http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/jul/05/arcticshipping-trade-routes) The attraction of the voyage is that it is one-third of the distance of more traditional routes through the Suez Canal. This means less carbon-dioxide (CO2) emissions and less fuel. It also means less pirates. Attacks on ships off Somalia and in the Gulf of Aden have become so severe that some owners are already using longer sea routes around South Africa to avoid conflict. Christian Bonfils, the managing director of Nordic Barents operator Nordic Bulk Carriers, claims it will save him $180,000 in fuel costs. New Arctic voyages
are starting all the time. Russian oil company, Novatek is currently carrying a trial shipment of 60,000 tonnes of oil products to China via northern Siberia on the vessel, Perseverance.

60

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Northwest Passage Good Solves Panama


The Northwest Passage is kind of neat, allows ships to avoid using the Panama Canal
Michael Byers, Suzanne Lalonde, 2009 ( February 6, 2009 VANDERBILT JOURNAL OF TRANSNATIONAL LAW [Vol. 42:1133, Who Controls the Northwest Passage?, Lalande-Byersfinal-cr-v2.pdf, findpdf.net/pdf-viewer/Who-Controls-the-Northwest-Passage.html There is little doubt that the Northwest Passage will become attractive to foreign shipping, for it offers a route between East Asia and the Atlantic seaboard that is 4000 miles shorter than the curren route through the Panama Canalsaving time, fuel, and transit fees.39 It could also accommodate super-tankers and container ships that are too large for the Canal.40 In the near term,
uncertainties about the weather, availability of search and rescue, and movement of multiyear ice, along with higher insurance premiums, will likely dissuade reputable international shipping companies from using the Northwest Passage. However, less

solvent and reputable companies might take the risk, raising the prospect that some of the least safe vessels on the oceans might actually be the first to use th waterway.41 Franklyn Griffiths argues that ships are more likely to go straight
across the Arctic Ocean to the north of Canadian territory.42 This is probably accurate for voyages between Asia and Europe or between the west coast of North America and Europe, but goin around Greenland adds more than 1000 miles to voyages to or from the east coast of North America. Three or four foreign cruise ships already traverse the Passage each summer.43 In August 2008, a Danish cable laying ship, the M/V Peter Faber, needed to move from a project near Taiwan to another project between Newfoundland and Greenland.44 The captain chose the Northwest Passage, sailing through without incident or fanfare.45 The

deepwater route of the Northwest Passage can also accommodate super-tankers and container ships that are too large for the Panama Canal. More and more ships are being
built that exceed the Panamax dimensions of 294 meters by 32 meters with a maximum draft of 12 meters (giving rise to a displacement of around 65,000 tons).46 The relatively calm waters within the Archipelago will also be attractive . In 1999, a massive Russian dry dock was towed to the Bahamas through the Northwest Passage in order to reduce its exposure to ocean storms.

61

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Science Leadership AdvI/L


Ice race is happening now Ice breakers are key to the exploration of science by delivering supplies to hundreds of scientists
Io9, 12 (JAN 6, 2012, KEITH VERONESE, daily publication that covers science, science fiction, and the future Shortage of icebreaker ships could lose us the race to
explore the Antarctic, io9 http://io9.com/5873385/shortage-of-icebreaker-ships-could-lose-us-the-race-to-explore-the-antarctic) DG

What happens when scientists need supplies, but are hundreds of miles from civilization and surrounded by an 8 foot thick sheet of ice? Billion dollar, specially designed icebreaker ships act as mobile science platforms and make way for supply, personnel, and refueling ships. Due to destructive forces and rough terrain, these ships are often in short supply. Let's take a look at these massive ships and what happens when hundreds of scientists are stranded and in need of supplies in Antarctica. Icebreaker ships are Necessary to Explore Earth's true Final Frontier Icebreaker ships are necessary to move and supply scientists studying the extreme climate and fascinating extremophile organisms living Antarctica and other ice-covered parts of the world. Built in 1955 on a sea of volcanic rock, McMurdo Station is the largest Antarctic base and the U.S. hub for its NSF funded Antarctic Program, with over 900 scientists living and working at McMurdo. Antarctica is also home to Palmer Station , a smaller outpost holding 40 scientists. Both stations are surrounded by miles of six to eight feet thick ice. McMurdo Station in Pop Culture McMurdo
Station is a common plot point in sci-fi and pop culture quite often due to its extreme location. Sheldon from The Big Bang Theory likely spent the summer between seasons two and three at McMurdo while Leonard and the gang falsified data. Stargate SG-1 used McMurdo as one of humanity's last military bases and John Carpenter's The Thing makes reference to the station. Greg Rucka's Whiteout, a comic turned movie, is told from the

How does an Icebreaker work? The ships come in a variety of sizes, with only a handful of the ships able to navigate the ice covered waters of Earth's poles. Icebreaker ships rely on a reinforced hull, a specially designed bow, and an enormous power supply to create a path for ships carrying people and supply to some of the most inhabitable and environmentally hostile regions on the planet. The ice is broken not by the forward driving force of the ship, but by using the specially designed front of the ship to move on top of the ice - the weight of the ship then breaks the ice. Shaping the front of the ship (the "bow") like a spoon allows the ship to slide up and onto the ice. National Science Foundation Funded Ships The United States' National Science Foundation also outfits two
perspective of a U.S. Marshal working at McMurdo Station. icebreakers, the Nathaniel B. Palmer and the Laurence M. Gould. The ships act as mobile research stations for climate and polar research. The Polar

Russia is home to several functioning icebreakers, including the only nuclear-powered icebreakers in the world. The icebreakers used within Russia are necessary to keep commercial shipping channels in northern parts of the country open for trade. How much do Icebreaker ships cost? Due to the rigors of the work these ships
Star & Polar Sea are operated by the U.S. Coast Guard, with the NSF funding repairs and fuel for duo in recent years.

perform, routine damage piles up. Temporary decommissioning for repairs can take 2 years and cost $200 to 400 million for a refit that lasts only 7-10 years. Building a new heavy icebreaker costs upwards of one billion dollars. Individual icebreakers are decommissioned several times during their lifespan for large scale repairs, with well-maintained ships in service for 25-30 years. Cutting off supplies to NSF research stations? A typical refueling mission to McMurdo station calls for an icebreaker to pass through 12-14 nautical miles of ice sheets of ice 6 to 8 feet thick. Without a high-powered icebreaker ship, re-supplying the sites is impossible. The Polar Star is currently out of service for repairs until 2014, the Polar Sea is unlikely to ever sail again, while the Laurence M. Gould shuttles supplies to the Antarctic on another path from the coast to Chile to Antarctica. What

happens when you can't get supplies to McMurdo Station? This scenario played out in the Fall of 2011. With no other option, the National Science Foundation asked Sweden use their icebreaker, Oden, to resupply McMurdo Station and camps throughout the Antarctic. The Swedish government refused the request, leading the NSF to consider a contingency plan pulling researchers out of Antarctica and temporarily ending polar research. To end the stalemate, the NSF chartered a Russian icebreaker, the Vladimir Ignatyuk, to supply McMurdo and other Antarctic stations. Losing the Space Race & the Snow Race? Do we want to
continue researching one of the most bizarre environments on earth? Imagine the medicinal and biochemical opportunities that lie amongst the thermophilic organisms living within the world's most extreme terrain. The United States' crewed space efforts are non-existent at the moment does the country want to lose the foothold established by two previous generations in Antarctica?

knowledge and adventure on Earth over?

Is humanity's search for unknown

62

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Science Leadership AdvI/L


Icebreakers are necessary for continuing to improve research in the Arctic
Walter B. Parker 2011 (Oct 27 What, research needs and priorities are important to Arctic development?) http://www.arctic.noaa.gov/essay_parker.html The most rapid advances in developing better scientific and technological answers to the problems that global change and increasing populations will generate for the Arctic in the next century can be obtained by continuing the declassification of the information collected since World War II, especially ocean temperature and current information. Combined with a continued presence of icebreaker and submarine cruises, we may find the necessary information in the Arctic Basin to gives us better predictive capabilities. Those involved in
U.N. agencies are breaking new ground. Permanent participants are being sponsored by their national funding sources.

SEARCH will be promoting better underwater research vehicles also. It will be critical to bring together on a continuing basis those studying physical systems with those working on biological systems in each region. It would be a mistake to assume that this is happening as a regular part of our way of doing science. We have come a long way in the past decade on incorporating traditional history and knowledge on local indigenous peoples in our findings. Joint efforts sponsored by Working Groups of the Arctic Council with

There is still a great deal of information to gain by continuing and enhancing these efforts. It is not probable that there will be large increases in Arctic populations due to immigration as occurred in the last century, but even small increases can have a major effect. The greatest danger will come from the continued global population increase and the stresses created for all of the planet, including the Arctic.

63

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Science Leadership AdvI/L Ice Breakers


Icebreakers are uniquely key to maintain the United States stance as a leader in science
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World:An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) The execution of polar science faces special challenges due to the harsh environment encountered in conducting experiments, making observations, and collecting samples. A primary characteristic of the polar regionsthe presence of icewhile fundamental to the global importance of these regions, presents major logistical challenges. Many locations are difficult to access, and reliable infrastructure must be maintained to safeguard scientists operating safely in these areas. To this end, a network of stations, field camps, laboratory facilities, ships, airplanes, observing networks, and other support infrastructure has been developed over the years in both the Arctic and the Antarctic. Essential to these operations is access through and operation icecovered oceans and coastal seas. The support of polar research requires ships of various icebreaking capabilities, including those that are the subject of this report. This chapter highlights some of the major research themes being pursued in polar science, demonstrating the value provided by this work to the nation. A glimpse of where this science will go in the future is also provided. The scientific value justifies the significant investment needed for polar research to continue and indeed flourish over the next several decades. Simply put, access to the polar regions is fundamentally important if the United States is to continue to be a leader in polar science. Icebreakers are a key part of the necessary infrastructure: They are needed to conduct science in Arctic waters and to open a channel to allow resupply of McMurdo Station (and, in turn, South Pole Station and inland sites) in Antarctica.

64

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Science Leadership AdvArctic Key Science Research


Polar research is invaluable to science and has directly benefitted society
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World:An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) Fundamental advances resulting from polar research have directly benefited society. Polar research led to the identification of the presence and cause of the ozone hole and has resulted in coordinated worldwide actions to discontinue the use of chlorofluorocarbons. Understanding how the polar regions affect ocean circulation is leading to a better understanding of global climate. The study of Weddell seals, which dive to great depths and cease breathing for long periods, led to better understanding of how such mammals handle gas dissolved in blood during and after deep diving events. This has contributed to advances in understanding sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). The study of mammals, insects, and plants that endure freezing temperatures, yet prevent the formation of ice crystals in their internal fluids, is aiding in the design of freeze-resistant crops and improved biomedical cryopreservation techniques. The Arctic and Antarctic are natural laboratories whose extreme, relatively pristine environments and geographically unique settings enable research on fundamental phenomena and processes that are feasible nowhere else. Today, researchers seek a better understanding of how new ocean crusts form, how organisms adapt to the extremes of temperature and seasonality (light conditions), how ice sheets behave, and how the solar wind and the earth interact. Unexplored, subglacial lakes in the Antarctic that have been sealed from the atmosphere for millions of years are soon to be explored and entered. Beneath the South Pole Station a cubic kilometer of clear ice is being instrumented with 5,000 detectors to observe high-energy neutrinos that may tell us about phenomena such as supernovae. Pristine ice cores that span centuries give direct data about temperature changes and atmospheric gas concentrations in the past.

Polar research is key to scientific advancement


NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World: An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) Polar research has brought, and will continue to bring, tangible societal benefits. The success of polar research is intimately linked to the availability of appropriate infrastructure and logistical support to allow scientists to work in these natural laboratories whose unique settings enable research on fundamental phenomena and processes that are feasible nowhere else. Access to the polar regions, predicated on the availability of adequate icebreaking capability, is essential if the United States is to continue as a leader in polar science.

65

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Science Leadership AdvWarming Research I/L


Having ice breakers facilitates research in the arctic and antarctic and they are needed even though warming exists
Ronald O'Rourke, Specialist in Naval Affairs, 2012 (June 14, Coast Guard Polar Icebreaker Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress Congressional Research Service) Operations to support National Science Foundation (NSF) research activities in the Arctic and Antarctic have accounted in the past for a significant portion of U.S. polar icebreaker operations.1 Supporting NSF research in the Antarctic has included performingor, in more recent years, standing ready to assist inan annual mission, called Operation Deep Freeze, to break through the Antarctic ice so as to resupply McMurdo Station, the large U.S. Antarctic research station located on the shore of McMurdo Sound, near the Ross Ice Shelf. Although polar ice is diminishing due to climate change, observers generally expect that this development will not eliminate the need for U.S. polar icebreakers, and in some respects might increase mission demands for them. Even with
the diminishment of polar ice, there are still significant ice-covered areas in the polar regions. Diminishment of polar ice could lead in coming years to increased commercial ship, cruise ship, and naval surface ship operations, as well as increased exploration for oil and other resources, in the Arctic activities that could require increased levels of support from polar icebreakers.2 Changing

ice conditions in Antarctic waters have made the McMurdo resupply mission more challenging since 2000.3 An April 18, 2011, press report states that the Commandant of the Coast Guard, Admiral Robert Papp, sees plenty of reasons the United States will need polar icebreakers for the foreseeable future, despite speculation that thinning ice in the Arctic could make the icebreakers replaceable with other ice-hardened ships, the admiral said last week. I dont see that causing us to back down on some minimal level of polar icebreakers, Papp told Inside the Navy. The fact of the matter is, theres still winter ice thats forming. Its coming down pretty far. We don't need to get up there just during summer months when theres open water.4

Our future ability to predict and solve global warming is dependent upon icebreakers, the US NEEDS to invest to maintain leadership because there is NO alternative
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World:An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs )
This chapter has highlighted some of the most exciting polar research being conducted today. Polar research is contributing to a wide range of disciplines, providing fundamental information about Earths systems and how they operate. The

continued vitality of polar research is intimately linked to the availability of the appropriate infrastructure and logistical support to
allow scientists to work in these challenging environments. Conducting research in the polar regions is as complex and challenging as space science.

Like research in outer space, U.S. leadership in international polar science is being challenged as countries increasingly exercise their national prerogatives at the poles. As polar science advances, more and more difficult scientific questions are being asked that will require sustained and continuous observations and measurements in these regions. In the north, access to the central Arctic Basin will provide an understanding of the evolution of northern climates. Prediction of future change can be based only on a full understanding of the Arctic and Antarctic systems. In the south, year-round scientific access will be vital, with current research limited by the ability of researchers and teams to access on a regular basis all of the ice-covered seas of Antarctica and the Arctic. While assets and platforms such as airplanes and spaceborne sensors are important technological tools for future investigations, surface ground-truth and in situ sampling cannot and will not be replaced in the foreseeable future. The availability of adequate icebreaking capabilities is fundamental and essential to research in the polar regions of our planet, from which we gain an understanding of human life on Earth, both historically and climatically. The committee noted the successful relationship between U.S.
Coast Guard HEALY operations and the U.S. Arctic marine science community, fostered in part by the UNOLS (University-National Oceanographic Laboratory System) Arctic Icebreaker Coordinating Committee (AICC) and supports the continuation of this successful relationship.

66

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Science Leadership AdvWarming Research I/L


Icebreakers are THE critical infrastructure that enables polar research which is key to solve global warming
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World:An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) Atmospheric processes in the Arctic, such as the formation and persistence of clouds, the transport and disposition of solar radiation, and large-scale patterns of variability in the atmospheric pressure fields, play a central role in global climate. A more detailed understanding and representation of these processes in global climate models is essential to improving predictions of future climate (ACIA, 2005). Such advances in understanding require intensive observations of the Arctic atmosphere over the oceans, which depend strongly on icebreaker support, for the deployment of drifting ice
camps, transects with icebreakers across the Arctic Ocean, and deployment of measurement systems (e.g., Perovich et al., 2003).

Understanding climate change in the Arctic is key to understanding climate change across the world
Nick Bond, Jim Overland and Nancy Soreide, writers for the NOAA 2012 (Why and how do scientists study climate change in the Arctic? What are the Arctic climate indices?) http://www.arctic.noaa.gov/essay_bond.html Dramatic changes have been occurring in the Arctic during the past decade. These changes include unusual
impacts on the oil industry, tourism, and shipping routes. The

melting of glaciers, sea ice, and permafrost, and shifts in patterns of rain and snow fall, freshwater runoff, and forest/tundra growth. The consequences include disrupted wildlife migration patterns, altered fish stocks, modified agricultural zones, and increased forest fires. These changes have impacted the lives of Native residents who depend on the environment for a continuation of their traditional subsistence lifestyle, and may also have significant

US Arctic Research Commission (1999) stated "change in the Arctic may play a substantial role in climate change throughout the globe", and moreover, that "global change, particularly climate change may have its most pronounced effects in the Arctic." Conditions in the Arctic are very different from those at lower latitudes on the globe, and "the Arctic remains one of the least explored, studied and understood places on earth."

Arctic research is key to understanding and solving climate change


Walter B. Parker 2011 (Oct 27 What, research needs and priorities are important to Arctic development?) http://www.arctic.noaa.gov/essay_parker.html The global models on climate change will require a steady flow of data from the Arctic. Northern regions, if we are to answer the questions raised thus far on the long term effects of carbon dioxide emissions on global warming, the role of the Arctic Ocean as a generator of major changes in the oceans worldwide, and the other controversies generated by a world population that has quadrupled in the past century; it will require programs that are designed to continue through most of the next 100years. These needs have been recognized by a major effort launched by the United States titled Study of Environmental
Arctic Change (SEARCH), which is already generating a strong response throughout the circumpolar world as well as nations not a part of the Arctic that have strong Arctic interests.

SEARCH has been conceived as a broad interdisciplinary, multi-scale program to understand the recent and ongoing changes that have resulted in dramatic decreases in sea ice in the Arctic, dramatic changes in permafrost, radiation effects including the ultra violet holes at both ends of the planet, and concurrent changes in animal and plant
populations. It includes a long term program to track environmental changes, a modeling program to test ideas about the coupling between different components, and to attempt to predict the future course of change in the Arctic and its effect upon other systems linked to the Arctic.

It will institute process studies to test hypotheses about feedback processes; and an assessment component to explain, to the best of our abilities, the ultimate impact of global change on the Arctic and the global ecosystem and the societies that live within and depend upon those ecosystems.

67

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Science Leadership AdvEnviro Disaster I/L


An increase in use of Arctic waters creates more need for icebreakers that can respond to environmental disasters or other accidents
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World:An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) Any increase in marine activity in the Arctic will almost assuredly create greater risks of environmental impact and the potential for human activities that push the limits of safety near the ice edge, especially in the shoulder seasons. These activities will increase the necessity to respond to accidents and create a greater need for law enforcement in ice margin areas, which will increase the need for ice-capable ships (ice-strengthened ships and icebreakers) in the Arctic. This increase in human activity in more northerly latitudes will most likely increase the demand on the United States to have a greater presence in and around the ice margin to perform its many safety, security, and law enforcement missions. U.S. government-controlled access and oversight will be needed with increased vessel traffic, particularly to maintain U.S. interests around the State of Alaska and in U.S. territorial waters.

Icebreakers solve Arctic environmental degradation through disaster and accident relief
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World:An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) Protecting the Arctic marine environment begins with ensuring the safety of vessels operating in these challenging conditions, including the availability of icebreaking assistance and comprehensive monitoring of vessel movements. Prevention might also include a regulatory regime, limiting vessels to geographic areas and seasonal periods appropriate to their ice capabilities. The Canadian Arctic Shipping Pollution Prevention Regulations (ASPPR) would serve as an obvious example. Increases in traffic, especially from Russian or Canadian waters, may create U.S. interest in establishing regulations; enforcement and deterrence would necessitate an on-scene presence capable of operating in ice. The U.S. Coast Guard would clearly have regulatory responsibility for this type of waterways management. Responding to a major oil spill in the Arctic is challenging, as cleanup activities for an onshore spill near Prudhoe Bay in early 2006 attest. Oil cleanup offshore would be even more difficult due to the dearth of infrastructure and the possibility of ice. Where depth of water permits access, an icebreaker could offer command-and-control capabilities, communications, berthing, helicopters, boats, cargo space, heavyweight handling gear, tankage, and support services to smaller craft, all of which would be of great benefit to cleanup operations. Direct oil recovery could also be included as an icebreaker capability: POLAR SEA successfully tested a boommounted skimming system known as the Vessel of Opportunity Skimming System (VOSS) (as well as other capabilities) while participating in an oil spill exercise off Sakhalin Island in 1998. The U.S. Coast Guards new fleet of coastal buoy tenders is equipped with VOSS, and thought should be given to the need for new polar icebreakers to be equipped with the latest technology for oil spill response

68

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Science Leadership AdvOil Spills I/L


Arctic presence key to respond to oil spills
Snow, 6/11/12. Nick Snow, Washington Editor. "Salazar orders first deepwater gulf oil
containment exercise. Oil and Gas Journal. Lexis. http://www.lexisnexis.com/lnacui2api/results/docview/docview.do?docLinkInd=true&risb=21 _T15105698873&format=GNBFI&sort=BOOLEAN&startDocNo=1&resultsUrlKey=29_T151056 98881&cisb=22_T15105698880&treeMax=true&treeWidth=0&csi=8039&docNo=9 BSEE officials also participated on May 24 in an all-day table top exercise designed to simulate the response to a well blowout in the Chukchi Sea. The exercise, planned over the past several months, included representatives from the US Coast Guard, the US Environmental Protection Agency, the US Fish and
Wildlife Service, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the State of Alaska, the North Slope Borough, and Shell Exploration & Production Co., which has requested approval to conduct exploratory drilling in the Arctic Ocean this summer, the agency said. "This exercise allowed us to do a large-scale test of how the federal government and

industry would carry out many of the key components of a response," Watson said. "It also tested the ability to get crucial data in real time to officials in Washington, DC." BSEE said it will conduct a series of planned and unannounced exercises and inspections throughout the year to test industry's ability to meet the conditions of their oil spill response plans and effectively respond to a potential spill in the Arctic, in the event that exploratory drilling activities are approved. The bureau will also continue to participate in joint exercises, such as yesterday's event, to evaluate and improve communication and coordination among federal and state partners and the company. Exercise's details The table top scenario began on the second
day of a simulated response to a subsea blowout with a 25,000 b/d flow rate, according to BSEE. Exercise participants completed an Incident Action Plan outlining the details of the release, coordinated response efforts among participating agencies, developed response objectives, and identified response assets. The Alaska Regional Response Team worked with participants on the approval and use of dispersants and in-situ burning during the simulated response. DOI's Emergency Operations Center was used to notify key personnel in Washington of the exercise's progress, and provided real-time data feeds from Anchorage, the agency said. "While this exercise gives us confidence in the preparedness levels of our federal, state, and local

partners, and Shell, it is only one piece of the spill response puzzle," Watson said. "We will be repeatedly

testing Shell's equipment and their ability to respond, including through field deployments and unannounced drills. We will hold Shell accountable to its plans, and ensure that all personnel and equipment are positioned and ready before any proposed drilling activities could proceed."

Coast Guard key to solve oil spills Kroh et al, 12. Kiley Kroh, Associate Director for Ocean Communications at the Center for
American Progress, Michael Conathan, Director of Ocean Policy at the Center for American Progress, and Emma Huvos, February 2012. Putting a Freeze on Arctic Ocean Drilling. Center for American Progress. http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2012/02/pdf/arcticreport.pdf In the event of an oil spill, the Coast Guard would be called upon to coordinate the federal response. Testifying before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation last July, Coast Guard Commandant Robert Papp expressed grave concern about the lack of support and infrastructure in the Arctic, stating, If this were to happen off the North Slope of Alaska, wed have nothing. Were starting from ground zero today. We have zero to operate with at present. 67 In December testimony before the House Transportation and Infrastructure Subcommittee, Papp also said his agency will work to ensure its force structure is appropriately sized, trained, equipped and postured to meet its Arctic mission requirements. 68 But in order to carry out this mission in a changing Arctic, the commandant emphasized that The Coast Guards most immediate operational requirement is infrastructure.

69

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Science Leadership AdvOil Spills Bad Enviro


Destroys ocean ecosystems
P.F. KINGSTON, Flanders Marine Institute, Spill Sciences and Technology Bulletin, 7/2/99 These arguments hold true where there is a reservoir of species that can replace those lost by oiling. However , the recent oil spills resulting from the wreck of the Jessica off San Cristobal on the Galapagos islands has focused attention on the fact that species lost as the result of an oil spill may not always be replaceable. The Galapagos had a lucky escape. The Jessica, spilled around 1000 tonnes of oil about 600 tonnes of diesel, and 400 tonnes of bunker fuel oil. Fortunately wind and currents took the oil away from San Cristobal giving time for the diesel to evaporate and the fuel oil to disperse before it could do major damage to the other islands. Nevertheless some oiling took place. Had the oil slick not broken up the world may have suffered its first true ecological disaster in which entire animal species could have been wiped out. About 40% of the species found on the Galapagos are unique to the archipelago. Amongst theses are the lava gull (only 400 breeding pairs known to exist), and the Galapagos penguin and the flightless cormorant (more or less confined to a single island), and the marine iguanas. A few tonnes of fuel oil in the wrong place at the wrong time have the potential to extinguish these species forever.

Extinction
Craig 3 (Robin Kundis, professor of law @ Florida State, University of Colorado Law Review,
Summer, Lexis) Marine ecosystems have immense value. Oceans cover more than 70% of our planet, 314 support vast reserves of biodiversity (in all senses), 315 produce at least half of the Earth's atmospheric oxygen, 316 drive the planet's hydrological cycle, 317 sequester carbon dioxide, 318 and play a significant role in the earth's climate and weather. 319 As such, oceans and estuaries are critical providers of ecosystem services - those "myriad of life support functions, the observable manifestations of ecosystem processes that ecosystems provide and without which human civilizations could not thrive." 320 According to a comprehensive study that appeared in Nature in 1997, "about 63% of the estimated value [of the world's ecosystem services] is contributed by marine ecosystems," especially coastal ecosystems. 321 Specifically, "coastal environments, including estuaries, [*892] coastal wetlands, beds of sea grass and algae, coral reefs, and continental shelves ... cover only 6.3% of the world's surface, but are responsible for 43% of the estimated value of the world's ecosystem services."

70

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Science Leadership AdvOil Spills Bad Enviro


Oil spill in the arctic would be even more devastating than previous catastrophic spills
Kroh et al, 12. Kiley Kroh, Associate Director for Ocean Communications at the Center for
American Progress, Michael Conathan, Director of Ocean Policy at the Center for American Progress, and Emma Huvos, February 2012. Putting a Freeze on Arctic Ocean Drilling. Center for American Progress. http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2012/02/pdf/arcticreport.pdf When the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded in the Gulf of Mexico in the early morning hours of April 20, 2010 it spawned one of the worst environmental disasters in U.S. history. BP Plcs Macondo well blowout lasted 89 days, spewing nearly 5 million barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico, and taking the lives of 11 men. The catastrophe showed the clear need for a massive, well-coordinated response when disaster strikes. Though the refrain never again was echoed time and again in the wake of the BP oil catastrophe, we are now facing a new oil spill threat. After spending over five years and $4 billion on the process, the Royal Dutch Shell Group is on the cusp of receiving the green light to begin exploratory drilling in Alaskas Beaufort
and Chukchi Seas this summer. 1 Though Shell emphasizes it would drill exploratory wells in shallow water rather than establishing deep-water production wells like Macondo,

the fundamental characteristics of the vastly unexplored and uninhabited Arctic coastline may increase the likelihood of a spill and will certainly hamper emergency response capability. 2 The decision to move forward with drilling in some of the most extreme conditions on Earth has deeply divided Alaska Native communities, drawn stark criticism from environmental groups, and caused other federal agencies such as the U.S. Coast Guard and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA, to raise concerns about the glaring absence of sound science in the region. This is the Arctic has inadequate infrastructure to deal with an oil spill, and response technologies in such extreme environmental conditions remain untested.2 center for American Progress | Putting a Freeze on Arctic drilling As we detail in this report, the resources and existing infrastructure that facilitated a grand-scale response to the BP disaster differ immensely from what could be brought to bear in a similar situation off Alaskas North Slope. Even the well-developed infrastructure and abundance of trained personnel in the Gulf of Mexico didnt prevent the Deepwater Horizon tragedy. Our Arctic response capabilities pale by comparison. There are no U.S. Coast Guard stations north of the Arctic Circle, and we currently operate just one functional icebreaking vessel. Alaskas tiny ports and airports are incapable of supporting an extensive and sustained airlift effort. The region even lacks such basics as paved roads and railroads. This dearth of infrastructure would severely hamper the ability to transport the supplies and personnel required for any large-scale emergency response effort. Furthermore, the extreme and unpredictable weather conditions complicate transportation, preparedness, and cleanup of spilled oil to an even greater degree. Much of the Arctic region quite simply remains a mystery, largely untouched by human activity. Yet other Arctic countries are moving forward with oil and gas explorationRussia signed a $7.9 billion
In addition to the lack of a scientific foundation,

highlighted in a recent letter to the Obama administration, signed by nearly 600 scientists from around the world, calling on the president and Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar to follow through on their commitment to science and enact recommendations made by the U.S. Geological Survey before approving any drilling activity in the Arctic. 3

exploration deal with BP last year and Exxon Mobil Corp. and Chevron Corp. are both expected to drill off Greenland over the next few years. 4, 5 Last year Norway rejectedplans to drill in some areas north of the Arctic Circle, but has indicated it intends to ramp up production in the Barents Sea, a region it shares with neighboring Russia. 6, 7 Due to the need for specially designed equipment, long supply lines, and limited transportation, a recent analysis from the nonpartisan U.S. Energy Information Administration found that studies on the economics of onshore oil and natural gas projects in Arctic Alaska estimate costs to develop reserves in the region can be 50 to 100 percent more than similar projects undertaken in Texas. 8 Despite these hurdles, some in the United States are eager to keep pace with other Arctic nations by tapping into the great opportunity for

Drilling for oil in this fragile region, however, should not be pursued without adequate safeguards in place. If weve learned anything from the Deepwater Horizon tragedy, its that the importance of preparedness cannot be overstated. That is why we strongly
economic gain they believe lies beneath the pristine Arctic waters. recommend specific actions be taken by the federal government, by Congress, and by Shell and other companies before beginning exploratory drilling in the Arctic.

71

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Science Leadership AdvOil Spills Bad Economy


Oil spills devastate the environment and the economy
Kroh et al, 12. Kiley Kroh, Associate Director for Ocean Communications at the Center for
American Progress, Michael Conathan, Director of Ocean Policy at the Center for American Progress, and Emma Huvos, February 2012. Putting a Freeze on Arctic Ocean Drilling. Center for American Progress. http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2012/02/pdf/arcticreport.pdf Even with the resources and infrastructure in place at the time of the spill, plus the extraordinary mobilization of people and equipment to the region, the damage to the Gulf Coast was catastrophic. Nearly 5 million barrels of oil leaked from the Macondo well, contaminating 665 miles of coastline and necessitating the use of 1.8 million gallons of dispersant, 13.5 million feet of boom, and 411 in-situ burns to contain the spill. 13, 14 The final price tag will be astronomical. BP has said the total bill for the oil spill will be $42 billion, while some analysts have projected a worst-case scenario price tag in excess of $70 billion. 15 The spill came at a cost to the unsuspecting American taxpayer, as well. The oil giant was able to cut its 2010 tax bill by almost $13 billion by writing off its losses due to the spill. 16 Recovery from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill is ongoing, and restoration will likely take decades to complete. Its long-term effects on the ecosystem, the economy, and health of Gulf Coast residents wont be known for years to come. In the case of the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill, for instance, it took several years for the herring population to collapse and it has yet to recover.\

Arctic ecosystem and indigenous communities uniquely vulnerable


Kroh et al, 12. Kiley Kroh, Associate Director for Ocean Communications at the Center for
American Progress, Michael Conathan, Director of Ocean Policy at the Center for American Progress, and Emma Huvos, February 2012. Putting a Freeze on Arctic Ocean Drilling. Center for American Progress. http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2012/02/pdf/arcticreport.pdf The Arctic is often referred to as the worlds last wild frontier, bordered by eight countries over the northernmost portion of the Earth. The U.S. Arctic shoreline extends more than 2,250 miles and serves as home to numerous indigenous communities that have subsisted for centuries in the harshest surroundings our planet has to offer. It also serves as habitat for some of the rarest and most fragile species on the planet. Any drilling activity in the region would be operating without sufficient scientific knowledge to determine the potential effects of operations. A report released earlier this year by the U.S. Geological Survey identified major gaps in Arctic science and research, emphasizing that significant questions remain regarding the scientific and technical information needed to adequately prepare for drilling in the challenging Arctic environment. 29 A subsequent review by the Pew Environment Group and Ocean Conservancy reiterated those deficiencies, outlining further steps that should be taken prior to drilling approval. 30 Upon releasing the report, Marilyn Heiman, director of Pews U.S. Arctic Program, stated that if we are to avoid irreparable harm to an ecosystem found nowhere else in U.S. waters, we need to develop a comprehensive research and monitoring plan and set aside significant areas for protection.

72

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Science Leadership AdvA2: Oil Spills Containable


Other spills were only contained because of available infrastructure
Kroh et al, 12. Kiley Kroh, Associate Director for Ocean Communications at the Center for
American Progress, Michael Conathan, Director of Ocean Policy at the Center for American Progress, and Emma Huvos, February 2012. Putting a Freeze on Arctic Ocean Drilling. Center for American Progress. http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2012/02/pdf/arcticreport.pdf While devastating, the images of the Deepwater Horizon tragedy available to the publicoiled birds and sea turtles, dead fish, crude-covered beaches, distraught residents, multiple failed attempts to stop the gush of oil into the Gulf of Mexicodidnt tell the whole story. Behind the scenes, the Coast Guard-led response was a well-orchestrated logistical feat and an unprecedented mobilization of people, supplies, vessels, and aircraft. Given the size and scope of the spill its difficult to imagine how it could have been much worse. But in many ways the Gulf of Mexico is the ideal setting for oil spill response with its warm weather, highly developed roads, rail lines, and numerous major port cities. Despite the favorable conditions in the Gulf, it still took three months, billions of dollars, and tens of thousands of responders to cap the well. At peak response, there were 9,700 vessels, 127 aircraft, and 47,829 people responding to the disaster. 9 Facilitating all of this was the well-developed infrastructure in place at the time of the spill. The abundance of ports, docks, airfields, Coast Guard facilities, and road and rail lines enabled a coordinated mobilization of people and equipment that streamed through the entire Gulf Coast during the response effort. Within a 500-mile radius of the blowout site, responders benefitted from access to 95 airports with runways 8,000 feet or longer (and 442 with runways 5,000 feet or longer), and 3,217 total ports. That area also includes multiple large cities replete with hotels, restaurants, gas stations, hospitals, and other facilities and equipment to support and sustain the largest environmental disaster response effort in U.S. history.6 center for American Progress | Putting a Freeze on Arctic drilling As a result of decades of oil and gas exploration in the Gulf and extensive experience dealing with oil spills, responders also had the benefit of a pre-existing network of oil spill-response resources in place when the Macondo well blowout occurred. These were mobilized immediately. Clean Gulf Associatesthe largest oil spill response cooperative in North Americahas served the Gulf of Mexico offshore oil industry for nearly 40 years. 10 In 1997, it partnered with the Marine Spill Response Corporation, an independent, nonprofit spill response company, to offer superior response capabilities in the Gulf region. 11 In the aftermath of Deepwater Horizon, these two companies provided services including mechanical recovery, dispersant application, in-situ burning of oil on the oceans surface, emergency communications, aircraft support, and hiring of subcontractors. They operate a combined total of 16 strategically positioned staging areas within a 500-mile radius of the Macondo well site, consisting of equipment and responders on call at all times. Though oil companies and their contractors are designated the responsible parties for oil spill response, cleanup, and restoration, its the U.S. Coast Guard that manages, directs, and coordinates response efforts when a spill occurs. The Coast Guard boasts a strong network of resources and personnel along the Gulf coast, including 30 facilities within a 500-mile radius of the spill site. In addition to providing crucial logistical support, the Coast Guard contributed 7,000 active and reserve personnel, 60 vessels, and 22 aircraft to the response effort. 12 Oil spill response capacity in the Gulf of Mexico and Arctic Resources within 500-mile radius BP Macondo well drilling site Shells proposed Chukchi/Beaufort drilling sites Airports with runways 8,000 feet or longer 95 4 Airports with runways 5,000 feet or longer 347 13 Equipment staging locations (oil spill response cooperatives) 15 5 Coast Guard permanent facilities 30 0 Major public ports 35 0 Sources: Center for American Progress, ESRI, Army Corp of Engineers 2011, NTAD 2011, Alaska DOT the deepwater horizon response and aftermath | www.americanprogress.org 7

73

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Emergency Response Add-on


Currently the US is unable to respond to an arctic catastrophe
Huffington Post 4/16/12, Arctic Climate Change Opening Region To New Military
Activity. Eric Talmadge. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/04/16/arctic-climate-changemilitary-activity_n_1427565.html The most immediate challenge may not be war both military and commercial assets are sparse enough to give all countries elbow room for a while but whether militaries can respond to a disaster. Heather Conley, director of the Europe program at the London-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, said militaries probably will have to rescue their own citizens in the Arctic before any confrontations arise there. "Catastrophic events, like a cruise ship suddenly sinking or an environmental accident related to the region's oil and gas exploration, would have a profound impact in the Arctic," she said. "The risk is not militarization; it is the lack of capabilities while economic development and human activity dramatically increases that is the real risk.

Icebreakers key to patrol waters year-round and to mitigate arctic catastrophes


Revkin 8. Senior fellow at Pace University's Pace Academy for Applied Environmental
Studies. Andrew C. Revkin. A Push to Increase Icebreakers in the Arctic. August 17, 2008. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/17/world/europe/17arctic.html?_r=1&ref=world&pagewan ted=print
All I know is, there is water where it didnt used to be, and Im responsible for dealing with that, Admiral Allen said in a recent interview. Given the 8 or 10 years it would take to build even one icebreaker, he added, I think were at a crisis point on

making a decision. The cost of building icebreakers and keeping the older vessels operating until the new ones have been launched could easily top $1.5 billion, according to several estimates. Arguments for new ships include the strategic, like maintaining a four-seasons ability to patrol northern waters, and the practical, like being able to quickly reach a disabled cruise ship or an oil spill in ice-clogged waters, Admiral Allen said. Even with the increasing summer retreats of sea ice, which many polar scientists say probably are being driven in part by global warming caused by humans, there will always be enough ice in certain parts of the Arctic to require icebreakers. Admiral Allen and
members of the presidential U.S. Arctic Research Commission have been pressing lawmakers for support and urging the White House to issue a presidential directive that emphasizes the need for increased oversight of the Arctic and for new ships.

74

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Onshore Infrastructure Add-on


Increased Icebreaker fleet eliminates need for onshore infrastructure
US Coast Guard 2010 United States Coast Guard High Latitude Region Mission Analysis
Coast Guard (http://assets.fiercemarkets.com/public/sites/govit/hlssummarycapstone.pdf) The gap in polar icebreaking capacity has resulted in a lack of at-sea time for crews and senior personnel and a corresponding gap in training and leadership. In addition to providing multimission capability and intrinsic mobility, a helicopter-capable surface unit would eliminate the need for acquiring an expensive shore-based infrastructure that may only be needed on a seasonal or occasional basis. The most capable surface unit would be a polar icebreaker. Polar icebreakers can transit safely in a variety of ice conditions and have the endurance to operate far from logistics bases. The Coast Guards polar icebreakers have conducted a wide range of planned and unscheduled Coast Guard missions in the past. Polar icebreakers possess the ability to carry large numbers of passengers, cargo, boats, and helicopters. Polar icebreakers also have substantial command, control, and communications capabilities. The flexibility and mobility of polar icebreakers would assist the Coast Guard in closing future mission performance gaps effectively.

75

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

SolvencyAgent Specification
The Coast Guard would coordinate with many federal agencies to achieve longtem solvency
GAO An analysis of the reports assembled by various government offices 12/01/11
[Government Accountability Office] DHS-OIG Report on the Coast Guard's Polar Icebreakers http://www.gao.gov/htext/d12254t.html The Coast Guard also coordinates with federal agencies, such as the NSF, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and DOD, and is involved with several interagency coordination efforts that address aspects of key practices we have previously identified to help enhance and sustain collaboration among federal agencies.[Footnote 35] For example, as discussed above, the Coast Guard collaborates with the NSF to manage the nation's icebreaker fleet, including scheduling icebreaker time for research activities,[Footnote 36] while NOAA provides the Coast Guard with weather forecasts and warnings, as well as information about ice concentration and type. Additionally, the Coast Guard is involved with interagency efforts such as the Interagency Policy Committee on the Arctic, created in March 2010 to coordinate government wide implementation of National Security Presidential Directive 66/Homeland Security Presidential Directive 25.[Footnote 37]

76

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Solvency6 Ice Breakers Solve


Six ice breakers needed to fulfill requirement- research and defense can then continue Ronald O'Rourke, Specialist in Naval Affairs, 2012 (June 14, Coast Guard Polar
Icebreaker Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress Congressional Research Service) The Coast Guard requires three heavy and three medium icebreakers to fulfill its statutory missions. These icebreakers are necessary to (1) satisfy Arctic winter and transition season demands and (2) provide sufficient capacity to also execute summer missions. Single-crewed icebreakers have sufficient capacity for all current and expected statutory missions. Multiple crewing provides no advantage because the number of icebreakers required is driven by winter and shoulder season requirements. Future use of multiple or augmented crews could provide additional capacity needed to absorb mission growth. The Coast Guard requires six heavy and four medium icebreakers to fulfill its statutory missions and maintain the continuous presence requirements of the Naval Operations Concept. Consistent with current practice, these icebreakers are single-crewed and homeported in Seattle Washington. Coast Guard Polar Icebreaker Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress Congressional Research Service 10 Applying crewing and home porting alternatives reduces the overall requirement to four heavy and two medium icebreakers. This assessment of non-material solutions shows that the reduced number of icebreakers can be achieved by having all vessels operate with multiple crews and two of the heavy icebreakers homeporting in the Southern Hemisphere.

Would only require six icebreakers.


ORourke, specialist in naval affairs, 6/14. Ronald ORourke Coast Guard Polar
Icebreaker Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress. Congressional Research Service. http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/weapons/RL34391.pdf The Coast Guard requires three heavy and three medium icebreakers to fulfill its statutory missions. These icebreakers are necessary to (1) satisfy Arctic winter and transition season demands and (2) provide sufficient capacity to also execute summer missions. Single-crewed icebreakers have sufficient capacity for all current and expected statutory missions. Multiple crewing provides no advantage because the number of icebreakers required

is driven by winter and shoulder season requirements. Future use of multiple or augmented crews could provide additional capacity needed to absorb mission growth.

77

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Solvency2 Ice Breakers Solve


Fleet would require more than 1 new ship
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World:An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) One new polar icebreaker is insufficient for several logical reasons. First, a single ship cannot be in more than one location at one time. No matter how technologically advanced or efficiently operated, a single polar icebreaker can be operational (on station) in the polar regions for only a portion of any year. An icebreaker requires regular maintenance and technical support from shipyards and industrial facilities, must reprovision regularly, and has to effect periodic crew change-outs. These functions cannot be conducted practically or economically in the ice and therefore require transit time to and from polar operating areas. A single icebreaker, therefore, could not meet any reasonable standard of active and influential presence and reliable, at-will access throughout the polar regions. A second consideration supporting the need for more than a single polar icebreaker is the potential risk of failure in the harsh conditions of polar operations. Icebreakers are the only ships designed to collide
regularly with hard objects and to go independently where no other surface vessels can survive. Despite their intrinsic robustness, damage and system failure are always a risk,

Being forced to operate with only a single icebreaker would necessarily require the ship to accept a more conservative operating profile, avoiding more challenging ice conditions because reliable assistance would not be available. A second capable
and the U.S. fleet must have enough depth to provide backup assistance. icebreaker, either operating elsewhere or in homeport, would provide ensured backup assistance and would allow for more robust operations by the other ship.

We need more ice breakers


Venzke Retired Rear Admiral, U.S. Coast Guard 9 (Norm, icebreaker sailor, severed on four
icebreakers, March, http://www.michaelyon-online.com/images/pdf/icebreakers.pdf, We Need More Icebreakers!)
increase to three would improve the situation, it would not solve the problem. Therefore, planning Absent knowledge of future plans and prioritizing of missions, one can only conclude that two operational Coast Guard icebreakers (even if a foreign charter were guaranteed) are grossly inadequate for supporting both Arctic and Antarctic operations. Polar-class replacements might not be available for at least eight years. Therefore, it would appear prudent to repair the Polar Star and return her to service as an interim measure. Although that

should provide for the expedited replacement of the two Polar-class icebreakers as well as a backup for the Healy. Finally, the Coast Guards cadre of icebreakerqualified operating and design personnel has been diminished because of the small fleet. The United States simply does not possess an icebreaker fleet commensurate with its national needs. Corrective action must commence as soon as possible. Otherwise, the aging fleet will continue its decline and actually become a dying breed and the success of vital national missions will suffer accordingly

Only two Icebreakers needed to take on responsibilities in the arctic active patrols in northern waters protect arctic regions
Ben Muse, Alaskan Economist 08. How Many Polar Icebreakers Does the U.S. Need?
Arctic Economics (http://benmuse.typepad.com/arctic_economics/2008/04/us-icebreaking.html) From a more strategic, longer-term perspective, two new icebreakers will far better position the nation for the increasing challenges emerging in both polar regions. Building two new icebreakers will ensure maintenance of this level of capability. A second new ship would allow the U.S. Coast Guard to reestablish an active patrol presence in U.S. waters north of Alaska to meet statutory responsibilities that will inevitably derive from increased human activity, economic development, and environmental changes. Other unplanned situations can include search-and-rescue cases, pollution incidents where initial response and U.S. Coast Guard monitoring are necessary, and assistance to ships threatened with grounding or damage by ice. The likelihood of these situations will increase as the number of ice-strengthened tankers, tourist ships, and other vessels in the polar regions grows.

78

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

SolvencyRepair Solves
Aff takes 8-10 years to put out ships, only short-term maintenance is necessary
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth and Life Studies
(DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World:An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs )

It is expected that the new polar icebreakers will not enter service for another 8 to 10 years until the program, budget, design, construction, and test phases are completed. During this time the United States needs a transition strategy to ensure a minimum level of icebreaker capability. The
committee recommends a continuing maintenance and repair program for the POLAR SEA, building on the work recently completed, to keep it mission capable until at least the first new polar ship enters service. The cost to keep this ship

mission capable will be much lower than a service life extension program. The resulting capability, an upgraded POLAR SEA and a fully capable HEALY, is less than this committee believes the nation needs, but a cost-effective strategy should emphasize new construction rather than maintenance of aging ships. The nation may have to charter supplemental ship services during the

transition to new ships. The committee also advises that the POLAR STAR continue to be kept in caretaker status, indefinitely moored at the U.S. Coast Guard pier. If the POLAR SEA has catastrophic problems, the POLAR STAR could be reactivated and brought back into service within a year or so.

The ships are repairable- no need to build new if life can be extended another 25 years Ronald O'Rourke, Specialist in Naval Affairs, 2012 (June 14, Coast Guard Polar Icebreaker
Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress Congressional Research Service)

The Coast Guard stated in February 2008 that performing the extensive maintenance, repair, and modernization work needed to extend the service lives of the two ships by 25 years might cost roughly $400 million per ship. This figure, the Coast Guard said, is based on assessments made by independent contractors for the Coast Guard in 2004. The service life extension work, the Coast Guard said, would improve the two icebreakers installed systems in certain areas. Although the work would be intended to permit the ships to operate for another 25 years, it would not return the cutters to new condition.34 An August 30, 2010, press report stated that the Commandant of the Coast Guard, Admiral Robert Papp, estimated the cost of extending the lives of Polar Star and Polar Sea at about $500 million per ship; the article quoted Papp as stating that Polar Star and Polar Sea were built to take a beating. They were built with very
thick special steel, so you might be able to do a renovation on them and keep going. I think there are certain types of steel that, if properly maintained, they can go on for an awful long time. What the limit is, Im not sure.35

Remodeling and repairing is cheaper and will be good to go in 2 years


Ronald O'Rourke, Specialist in Naval Affairs, 2012 (June 14, Coast Guard Polar Icebreaker
Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress Congressional Research Service) Regarding the potential cost to repair Polar Sea and return it to service, at a December 1, 2011, hearing that focused on the polar icebreaker fleet (see December 1, 2011, Hearing below), Dave Whitcomb, the chief operating officer of Vigor Industrial the owner of the shipyard that has conducted maintenance and repair work on Polar Sea and Polar Star for many years testified that Polar Sea can be restored to full mission readiness with a comparable longevity [to that of Polar

Star] at relatively modest cost and in a reasonably short period of time. Vigor Industrial estimates that bringing the Polar Sea up to an operationally capable condition would require approximately 11 million dollars. We base this on the fact that we have done comparable work on the Polar Star already and are well aware of what is required. This work would require approximately two years to complete and might well be finished faster depending on availability of key components.36 Whitcomb further testified
that the above estimated cost of $11 million includes overhauling the ships diesel engines ($5 million), replacing the ships obsolete cranes ($3 million), and upgrading the ships propellers ($3 million). Whether the work described above includes everything that would be needed to return Polar Sea to service is not clear, particularly given that the Coast Guard is transferring certain major equipment from Polar Sea to Polar Star to facilitate Polar Stars return to service.37

79

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Contracting Solves
Spending more money to buy ships bad- Leasing is a better option.
Gramling, doctoral degree in marine geochemistry from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution/Massachusetts Institute of Technology Joint Program for Oceanography, as well as bachelors degrees in geology and history, 7/6/12 (Carolyn, 6 July,
NSF Finds an Icebreaker to Reach McMurdo, Science Insider,http://news.sciencemag.org/scienceinsider/2012/07/nsf -finds-anicebreaker-to-reach.html)KW

After 2 months of negotiations, the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) has struck a deal with a Russian shipping company to charter a heavy-duty icebreaker to clear a path this winter to the largest U.S. scientific base in the Antarctic. The icebreaker Vladimir Ignatyuk (above), operated by the Murmansk Shipping Company, led the break-in and resupply of McMurdo Station last year after the Swedish government ended a long-standing agreement to lease its icebreaker, the Oden. In May, Murmansk informed NSF that the Ignatyuk would not be available for the 2012-13 season, due
to concerns about the ship's ability to operate safely in the Antarctic pack ice. But on 3 July, NSF announced that it had reached an agreement with Murmansk to charter the Ignatyuk for the coming season after all.

There are other options- Contracting or leasing ice breakers would not burn a hole in the Coast Guards pocket and would still provide access to key research and defense Ronald O'Rourke, Specialist in Naval Affairs, 2012 (June 14, Coast Guard Polar Icebreaker
Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress Congressional Research Service) Another potential issue for Congress is how many polar icebreakers, with what capabilities, the Coast Guard will need in the future. In assessing this issue, factors that Congress may consider include, but are not limited to, the
activities; the

following: current and projected mission demands for Coast Guard polar icebreakers as analyzed in the High Latitude Study and other recent studies, including an assessment of how those demands might be affected by NSF decisions on how to acquire icebreaking services to support its research

potential for various mission demands (not just those conducted in support of NSF research activities) to be met by non-Coast Guard icebreakers, including leases or charters of icebreakers owned by foreign governments or private firms; and the Coast Guards overall missions-vs.-resources situation, which includes the Coast Guards requirements to perform many non-polar missions and the Coast Guards desire to fund programs for performing these non-polar missions.42 Regarding the first factor above, the NSF states that although Coast Guard polar icebreakers are very capable, the NSF is mandated by presidential directive to perform its research activities in the most costeffective way possible, and that it can be more expensive for NSF to support its research activities with Coast Guard polar icebreakers than with charters of icebreakers crewed by contractor personnel. Although Coast Guard polar icebreakers in the past have performed the annual McMurdo break-in mission, the NSF
in recent years has chartered Russian and Swedish contractor-operated icebreakers to perform the mission (with a Coast Guard polar icebreaker standing ready to assist if needed). The

NSF has also noted that Healy, though very capable in supporting Arctic research, operates at sea for about 200 days a year, as opposed to about 300 days a year for foreign contractor-operated polar icebreakers. Regarding the second factor above, issues to consider would include, among other things, the potential availability of ships for lease, leasing costs, regulatory issues relating to long-term leases of capital assets for the U.S. government, and the ability of leased ships to perform the missions in question, including the mission of defending U.S. sovereignty in Arctic waters north of Alaska, the challenging McMurdo resupply mission, or missions that emerge suddenly in response to unexpected events.43 Regarding the first two factors above, some observers note the size of the polar

icebreaking fleets operated by other countries. Countries with interests in the polar regions have differing requirements for polar icebreakers, depending on the nature and extent of their polar activities. According to one source, as of January 2009, Russia had a fleet of 25 polar icebreakers (including 6 active heavy icebreakers, 2 heavy icebreakers in caretaker status, 15 other icebreakers, and 2 additional icebreakers leased from the Netherlands); Finland and Sweden each had 7 polar icebreakers; and Canada had 6.44 Regarding the third factor above, a January 17, 2011, press report stated that while the current Commandant of the Coast Guard, Admiral Robert Papp, remained committed to funding the procurement of eight National Security Cutters (NSCs),45 the

admiral was less optimistic about the prospects of replacing the Coast Guards heavy polar icebreakers, both of which are currently in port for restoration or repairs. He estimated that replacing them would cost $800 million each, and he does not see a national will to provide that kind of funding right now.

80

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Incremental Funding
Incremental funding solves cost problems and establishes sufficient capabilities
Ronald O'Rourke, Specialist in Naval Affairs, 2012 (June 14, Coast Guard Polar
Icebreaker Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress Congressional Research Service) Another potential oversight issue for Congress concerns the Coast Guards proposal to fund the acquisition of a new icebreaker using incremental funding (i.e., a series of annual funding incrementssee Funding in FY2013 Budget for New Polar Icebreaker in Background) rather than full funding (i.e., placing most or all of the ships acquisition cost into a single year). Section 31.6 of Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Circular A-1147 normally requires executive branch agencies to use full funding for acquiring capital assets such as a new ship. The Coast Guard appears to have received permission from OMB to propose the use of incremental funding for acquiring a new polar icebreaker; Congress may choose to approve, reject, or modify this proposal. Supporters of using incremental funding to acquire a new polar icebreaker could argue that funding this ship in a single year would create a one-year spike in Coast Guard funding requirements that could require offsetting and potentially disruptive oneyear reductions in other Coast Guard programs, and that using incremental funding mitigates the spiking issue by spreading the ships cost over several years. Supporters could argue that avoiding such budget spikes is a principal reason why the Navy in recent years has been given permission by OMB and Congress to use incremental funding to procure aircraft carriers and amphibious assault ships,48 and that a polar icebreaker is analogous to an aircraft carrier or an amphibious assault ship in being a very expensive (for the Coast Guard) ship that is procured once every several years. Supporters of using full funding to acquire a new polar icebreaker could argue that the acquisition cost of a polar icebreaker (roughly $900 million), though large by Coast Guard standards, is much less than that of an aircraft carrier (more than $11 billion) or an amphibious assault ship (more than $3 billion). They could argue that OMB believes using full funding reduces risks in the acquisition of capital assets,49 and that permitting the use of incremental funding for the procurement of a polar icebreaker could weaken adherence to the policy by setting a precedent for using incremental funding for acquiring other capital assets costing less than $1 billion. The issue of incremental funding as an alternative to full funding in the acquisition of Navy ships is discussed at length in other CRS reports.50

81

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Bulbous Bow
Coclusive results show that the bulbous bow proves the most effective
Kim et al, (Hyun-Soo Kim, Mun-Keun Ha, Dang Ahn Samsung Heavy Industries, Marine
Research Institute, Koje Shipyard, Korea and David Molyneux Institute for Ocean Technology, National Research Council, Canada. Hull form design for icebreaking tankers. NRC Publications Archive.)

The results of this research have been extremely important to SHIs strategy to become the world leader in the construction of large icebreaking merchant ships. Model testing has been an essential element of this strategy, since it is the opinion of the authors that analytical methods are not sufficiently well developed for accurate performance predictions. The results of the research

have shown thA2: 1) Quite different bow shapes can result in similar resistance in ice, once allowances for hull-ice friction coefficient and ice thickness have been included. 2) Icebreaker designs have the lowest resistance in level ice and pack ice. Such a design is characterized by a raked bow with a long overhang. This type of bow is effective at breaking the ice, and directing the broken pieces around the hull. However, this type of bow has relatively poor performance in open water. 3) Bulbous bows in ice have distinctive properties, compared to conventional icebreaker bows. The bow shape results in a lot of secondary breaking where the ice floes come into contact with the upper surface of the bulb. When the ice is already broken before it comes into contact with the ship, this penalty is removed. It is possible for a ship with a bulbous bow to be effective in light ice conditions, especially pack ice. The ice breaking performance is clearly much worse than a bow designed for heavy ice, but the improvement in open water performance compensates for this. It may be particularly effective in an area with extensive icebreaker support.

82

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

SolvencyLaundry List
The best way to solve is building more ice breakers scheduling, distance, solves research and presence
Venzke Retired Rear Admiral, U.S. Coast Guard 9 (Norm, icebreaker sailor, severed on four
icebreakers, March, http://www.michaelyon-online.com/images/pdf/icebreakers.pdf, We Need More Icebreakers!)
The United States icebreaker fleet is absolutely inadequate. That opinion is supported by the fact that the fleet is incapable of meeting mission requirements without a chartered foreign icebreaker. Why is the United States in this position? Polar icebreakers are very expensive to build and support and, therefore, are neither popular nor of high priority within the appropriate federal agencies. One of the three Coast Guard icebreakers, the Healy (WAGB-20) is new, very capable, and well equipped for research but not the most powerful. The Polar Star (WAGB-10) and Polar Sea (WAGB-11) are quite powerful, but are more than 30 years old. Furthermore, the Polar Star has been placed in commissionspecial status and would require almost a year to be restored to operational status even on an emergency upgrade schedule. Thus, the United States effectively has only two polar icebreakers, the Healy and the Polar Sea. All polar icebreaking is hazardous even with the stoutest and most powerful ships manned by experienced professionals.

The only remedy for crippling ice damage and delays due to long shipyard availabilities are back-up icebreakers. Also, ship scheduling is complicated by less-than-precise ice forecastsis it a light or heavy ice year or, in other words, will one or two icebreakers be required? Further, those considerations are complicated by the vast distances between homeport, the Arctic, Antarctica, and repair facilities. Operations in the western Arctic involve the fulfilling of statutory requirements and the need for both research and a national presence in an area of increased international interest. Apparently,

the Healy is deemed adequate for the current level of operations. But she is only one ship, not immune from damage and delays and can only operate in one place at a given time. Given that diminishing ice will result in increased foreig n shipping in the United States area of interest, its obvious that an additional icebreaker will be needed. Now is the time to plan for that vessel with recognition that even more might be required to support our future requirements. Presumably, the Canadian Coast Guard will continue providing icebreaker support for the annual Thule (Greenland) Air Base resupply as long as it is needed. If not, additional icebreaker support would be necessary for that mission. Operations in Antarctica include the annual McMurdo base resupply that is vital and must be accomplished by sea during a narrow window of time. Without

it, the U.S. Antarctic Research Program of the National Science Foundation would grind to a halt except for the virtually ice-free

Palmer Station. Whether one or two icebreakers are required at McMurdo depends on the ice year, heavy or light. In 2006, ice conditions were forecast to be relatively light. Otherwise, a Russian icebreaker, the Krasin, would not have been chartered and scheduled for a solo break-in. Ultimately, she aborted that mission due to ice damage (a broken propeller blade). That necessitated an emergency deployment of the Polar Star on an estimated 7,000-mile transit to complete resupply at McMurdo. At that time, the Polar Sea was in the yard. The insufficiency of U.S. icebreakers is again exemplified by the necessity to charter a Swedish icebreaker to support the 2008-09 McMurdo resupply.

Ice breakers solve laundry list


NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World: An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) From a strategic, longer-term perspective, two new Polar class icebreakers will far better position the nation for the increasing challenges emerging in both polar regions. A second new ship would allow the U.S. Coast Guard to reestablish an active patrol presence in U.S. waters north of Alaska to meet statutory responsibilities that will inevitably derive from increased human activity, economic development, and environmental change. It would allow response to emergencies such as search-and-rescue cases, pollution incidents, and assistance to ships threatened with grounding or damage by ice. Moreover, a second new ship will leverage the possibilities for simultaneous operations in widely disparate geographic areas (e.g., concurrent operations in the Arctic and Antarctic), provide more flexibility for conducting Antarctic logistics (as either the primary or the secondary ship for the McMurdo break-in), allow safer multiple-ship operations in the most demanding ice conditions, and increase opportunities for international expeditions. Finally, an up-front decision to build two new polar icebreakers will allow economies in the design and construction process and provide a predictable cost reduction for the second ship.

83

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

SolvencyA2: Cost
The plan is cost effective and will provide at least a 30 year lifespan for these new ships Ronald O'Rourke, Specialist in Naval Affairs, 2012 (June 14, Coast Guard Polar
Icebreaker Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress Congressional Research Service) The Coast Guard estimated in February 2008 that new replacement ships for the Polar Star and Polar Sea might cost between $800 million and $925 million per ship in 2008 dollars to procure.31 The Coast Guard said that this estimate is based on a ship with integrated electric drive, three propellers, and a combined diesel and gas (electric) propulsion plant. The icebreaking capability would be equivalent to the POLAR Class Icebreakers [i.e., Polar Star and Polar Sea] and research facilities and accommodations equivalent to HEALY. This cost includes all shipyard and government project costs. Total time to procure a new icebreaker [including mission analysis, studies, design, contract award, and construction] is eight to ten years.32 The Coast Guard further stated that this notional new ship would be designed for a 30-year service life. The High Latitude Study provided to Congress in July 2011 states that the above figure of $800 million to $925 million in 2008 dollars equates to $900 million to $1,041 million in 2012 dollars. The study provides the following estimates, in 2012 dollars, of the acquisition costs for new polar icebreakers: $856 million for 1 ship; $1,663 million for 2 shipsan average of about $832 million each; $2,439 million for 3 shipsan average of $813 million each; $3,207 million for 4 shipsan average of about $802 million each; $3,961 million for 5 shipsan average of about $792 million each; and $4,704 million for 6 shipsan average of $784 million each. The study refers to the above estimates as rough order-of-magnitude costs that were developed as part of the Coast Guards independent Polar Platform Business Case Analysis.33

84

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

SolvencyA2: Timeframe
The plan is cost effective and will provide at least a 30 year lifespan for these new ships Ronald O'Rourke, Specialist in Naval Affairs, 2012 (June 14, Coast Guard Polar
Icebreaker Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress Congressional Research Service) The Coast Guard estimated in February 2008 that new replacement ships for the Polar Star and Polar Sea might cost between $800 million and $925 million per ship in 2008 dollars to procure.31 The Coast Guard said that this estimate is based on a ship with integrated electric drive, three propellers, and a combined diesel and gas (electric) propulsion plant. The icebreaking capability would be equivalent to the POLAR Class Icebreakers [i.e., Polar Star and Polar Sea] and research facilities and accommodations equivalent to HEALY. This cost includes all shipyard and government project costs. Total time to procure a new icebreaker [including mission analysis, studies, design, contract award, and construction] is eight to ten years.32 The Coast Guard further stated that this notional new ship would be designed for a 30-year service life. The High Latitude Study provided to Congress in July 2011 states that the above figure of $800 million to $925 million in 2008 dollars equates to $900 million to $1,041 million in 2012 dollars. The study provides the following estimates, in 2012 dollars, of the acquisition costs for new polar icebreakers: $856 million for 1 ship; $1,663 million for 2 shipsan average of about $832 million each; $2,439 million for 3 shipsan average of $813 million each; $3,207 million for 4 shipsan average of about $802 million each; $3,961 million for 5 shipsan average of about $792 million each; and $4,704 million for 6 shipsan average of $784 million each. The study refers to the above estimates as rough order-of-magnitude costs that were developed as part of the Coast Guards independent Polar Platform Business Case Analysis.33

85

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

SolvencyA2: Dont Build Enough


We wouldnt need many to make a difference in the arctic
Beilinson, Deputy Editor of Popular Mechanics, 12 (Jerry, February 17th, Why the U.S.
Must Build More Icebreakers Now, Popular Mechanics, http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/engineering/infrastructure/why-the-us-mustbuild-more-icebreakers-now-6693195) The defense budget is shrinking, and previous studies have pegged the price of a high-powered icebreaker at $800 million to $1 billion. However, the Coast Guards wish list for icebreakers is a small one, including up to four heavy-duty and two or three medium-duty ships. Even just one additional heavy-duty icebreaker would make a big difference, which is why its important for the project envisioned in the White Houses budget proposal to get rolling. The Pentagon saved several billion dollars last year by canceling the Marines Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle, an amphibious assault technology. Investing a fraction of the savings in an icebreaker program could double or triple U.S. capabilities. Similarly, the Navy plans to build dozens of littoral combat ships for operations relatively close to shore: Thats an important program. But as Lawson Brigham, a University of Alaska professor and former icebreaker captain, has pointed out, sacrificing just one or two of those ships could provide the money to roughly double the Coast Guards icebreaking muscle. The Arctic will become steadily more important politically and economically as the 21st century progresses, and the United States is fortunate to be an Arctic nation. Its time for the country to rebuild its northern seafaring capabilities.

86

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: Spending
Funding is available and currently being wasted on chartered ships
Bement, Director National Science Foundation, 06 (Dr. Arden L. Jr., September 26, NSF
Testimony Before the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation, http://www.nsf.gov/about/congress/109/alb_icebreaker_092606.jsp) KW
After opening the channel, the icebreaker escorts two vessels, a tanker and a freighter, to and from the ice pier at McMurdo. These re-supply vessels are ice-strengthened commercial vessels chartered by the Military Sealift Command (MSC). (The Navy used

to operate all of their own tankers and freighters, but more recently has depended on commercial contractors for construction, maintenance and staffing of vessels. As a result, MSC now charters virtually all of the tankers and freighters used by the DoD either through a direct industry charter or through a government-owned, contractor-operated (GOCO) arrangement.)

Two years ago, acting on advice from the Coast Guard that a second icebreaker should be brought in to assist the Polar Star, NSF chartered the Russian icebreaker Krasin for the purpose. The Coast Guards Polar Sea was undergoing repairs and no other U.S. icebreakers other than Healy were available but Healy was needed in the Arctic. Last year the Polar Sea was undergoing extensive repair. NSF again chartered the Russian icebreaker Krasin and held Polar Star in reserve (and eventually brought her in to assist in the final stages of the break-in). The situation for the coming year is again similar. Polar Sea is ready for duty but the Coast

Guard has recommended that a backup vessel be employed. NSF has therefore nearly concluded a charter for

the Swedish icebreaker, Oden. The USCG has performed its icebreaking mission in Antarctica with distinction for many decades, but with increasing difficulty in recent years. Its two Polar Class icebreakers are nearing the end of their

estimated lifetime and are becoming increasingly difficult and costly to keep in service. The need to charter the Krasin and Oden has already been mentioned. Given this state of affairs, NSF has given careful consideration to how best to meet the needs of the scientific community over the long-term. Under the current arrangement between NSF and the Coast Guard, NSF provides all the funding for USCG icebreaker operations and maintenance, and the Coast Guard carries out those duties. NSF provided $55.74M for operation of the USCG polar class icebreakers in 2006. In addition, NSF provided approximately $8 million for fuel and charter of Krasin. When chartering commercial
vessels such as the Krasin and the Oden, NSF pays only for the time

The US does not need to spend much to greatly increase its ice breaking capabilities.
Jerry Beilinson 12 (Feb 17, Why the U.S. Must Build More Icebreakers Now) http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/engineering/infrastructure/why-the-us-mustbuild-more-icebreakers-now-6693195 The defense budget is shrinking, and previous studies have pegged the price of a high-powered icebreaker at $800 million to $1 billion. However, the Coast Guards wish list for icebreakers is a small one, including up to four heavy-duty and two or three medium-duty ships. Even just one additional heavy-duty icebreaker would make a big difference, which is why its important for the project envisioned in the White Houses budget proposal to get rolling. The Pentagon saved several billion dollars last year by canceling the Marines Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle, an amphibious assault technology. Investing a fraction of the savings in an icebreaker program could double or triple U.S. capabilities. Similarly, the Navy plans to build dozens of littoral combat ships for operations relatively close to shore: Thats an important program. But as Lawson Brigham, a University of Alaska professor and former icebreaker captain, has pointed out, sacrificing just one or two of those ships could provide the money to roughly double the Coast Guards icebreaking muscle. The Arctic will become steadily more important politically and economically as the 21st century progresses, and the United States is fortunate to be an Arctic nation. Its time for the country to rebuild its northern seafaring capabilities.

87

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: Spending
Plan relatively inexpensive compared to other Coast Guard expenditures
ORourke, specialist in naval affairs, 6/14. Ronald ORourke Coast Guard Polar
Icebreaker Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress. Congressional Research Service. http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/weapons/RL34391.pdf Supporters of using full funding to acquire a new polar icebreaker could argue that the acquisition cost of a polar icebreaker (roughly $900 million), though large by Coast Guard standards, is much less than that of an aircraft carrier (more than $11 billion) or an amphibious assault ship (more than $3 billion). They could argue that OMB believes using full funding reduces risks in the acquisition of capital assets, 49 and
that permitting the use of incremental funding for the procurement of a polar icebreaker could weaken adherence to the policy by setting a precedent for usi

Economic benefits of sea lanes trumps initial investment cost


Treadwell, Lieutenant Governor of Alaska, 11 (Mead, December 1, America is Missing the
Boat Congressional Testimony United States House of Representatives Committee Transportation on Transportation and Infrastructure Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation, http://republicans.transportation.house.gov/Media/file/TestimonyCGMT/2011-12-1Treadwell.pdf) However we work out our finances, America and its trading partners could reap huge economic benefits from accessing northern sea routes. Former U.S. Coast Guard Lieutenant Commander Scott Borgerson wrote nearly four years ago about the financial advantages available to world commerce through Arctic shipping. 8 He told us how plying the Northern Sea Route from Rotterdam to Yokohama instead of traveling via the Suez Canal would yield distance savings of more than 40 percent. He told us that one container ship voyage from Seattle to Rotterdam via the Northwest Passage instead of the Panama Canal could save about 20 percent of its costs then about $3.5 million dollars. Borgerson envisioned a future of global Arctic shipping where a marine highway directly over the North Pole will materialize. Such a route, he wrote, which would most likely run between Iceland and Alaskas Dutch Harbor, would connect shipping megaports in the North Atlantic with those in the North Pacific and radiate outward to other ports in a hub-and-spoke system. As
the Arctic Marine Shipping Assessment predicted, most Arctic shipping traffic today is destinational, carrying resources out from or products in to Arctic regions. But we need to envision a time, coming soon, when products travelling to and from non-Arctic ports traverse our Arctic Ocean and Bering Sea and we need to be ready.

88

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: PoliticsPlan Popular


Plan is popular with Republicans Arctic seen as key priority
Strohm, Reporter at Bloomberg News, 10 (Chris, February 12th, Former reporter at
Government Executive Magazine, Coast Guard Commandment Cites Urgent Need for Icebreakers, Government Executive, http://www.govexec.com/defense/2010/02/coast-guardcommandant-cites-urgent-need-for-icebreakers/30855/#disqus_thread) Some lawmakers have stressed the need to recapitalize or buy new ice breakers, especially Maine Republican Sens. Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe, whose state's Bath Iron Works shipyard would likely get the work. Allen said the country faces "an ice-diminished Arctic," rather than an ice-free Arctic, meaning ice-faring ships are still needed. "If you have an event up there, you need to be able to respond, create command and control, very much like putting a cutter off Port-au-Prince [Haiti] to give you situational awareness and tell everybody what's going on," he said. "There is no infrastructure off the north slope of Alaska from which we can conduct operations." He said there are two airstrips but "as far as moving large numbers of people and equipment up there it's very difficult to do." "The way you do that is with an icebreaker that gives you access, presence, command and control and the ability to coordinate operations across that entire mission set," he added. "That is what we need to be talking about in my point of view." On other fronts, Allen defended the Obama administration's fiscal 2011 budget request even though it proposes to reduce Coast Guard personnel by nearly 800 positions. He said the budget gives the agency flexibility to recapitalize aging ships, and the Coast Guard will constantly evaluate its options for effectively handling missions. But he said as a result of the response to the earthquake in Haiti, the Coast Guard moved one of its cutters from off the shore of Panama and Ecuador to Port-au-Prince. That left a gap in a region where 10 metric tons of cocaine are smuggled per month, he said.

Congress cares about icebreakers Polar Sea proves


AP 12 (June 15, http://www.adn.com/2012/06/15/2506218/coast-guard-to-keep-seattlebased.html, Coast Guard icebreaker gets reprieve from demolition) "The Polar Sea's hull is still in sound condition," Cantwell said. "Postponing its scrapping allows the administration and Congress more time to consider all options for fulfilling the nation's critical icebreaking missions." The United States needs more icebreakers in the Arctic, the Alaska senators said. "While this may only be a six-month respite for the Polar Sea, I will use this period to work through my role on the Appropriations Committee to make America's icebreaking capacity a top priority," Murkowski said.

Republicans support it Just need a plan


Ahlers 11 (Mike, November 4, http://www.cnn.com/2011/11/03/politics/congress-polaricebreakers/index.html, Polar icebreaker dispute ties up Coast Guard bill The Congressional Research Service said one potential concern for Congress is the absence of a plan for replacing the Polar Star upon completion of its seven- to 10-year life after it returns to service in late 2012. That is why Rep. Frank LoBiondo, R-New Jersey, included the provision to decommission the Polar Star, said spokesman Jason Galanes. "We absolutely support the Arctic icebreaker mission," Galanes said. "We're forcing this decision rather then allowing the administration to kick the can down the road." In a statement, the Office of Management and Budget said the administration "strongly opposes" the provision, and that the repairs to the Polar Star "will stabilize the United States' existing polar fleet until long-term icebreaking capability requirements are finalized."

89

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: PoliticsPlan Popular


Popular Larsen
Dickie, columnist for the Seattle Times, 11 (Lance, December 13,
http://www.standard.net/stories/2011/12/13/coast-guard-needs-new-icebreakers-protect-usinterests-arctic, Seattle Times The Coast Guard needs new icebreakers to protect U>S. interests in the Arctic U.S. Rep. Rick Larsen, D-Wash., is working to focus congressional attention on giving the U.S. Coast Guard the ability to protect America's interests. As the ranking member of the House Transportation subcommittee on the Coast Guard, and a member of the House Armed Services Committee, he is well positioned to do so. Icebreakers are the key to "assured access to icecovered seas independent of ice conditions." Those words, from a 2007 National Research Council report, are reinforced by Coast Guard studies, including "The High Latitude Region Mission Analysis," and a comprehensive look at icebreaker issues and options published in November by the Congressional Research Service. All conclude the Coast Guard lacks the icebreaker capacity to represent U.S. interests in coming years. At least two new ships are needed. In the face of such clarity, the political jumble in Congress is a bit of a puzzle. Just to be clear:

Congress supports new ice breakers


Ahlers 11. Mike M. Ahlers, November 3, 2011. Polar icebreaker dispute ties up Coast Guard
appropriations. CNN. http://articles.cnn.com/2011-11-03/politics/politics_congress-polaricebreakers_1_icebreakers-polar-star-polar-sea?_s=PM:POLITICS The Congressional Research Service said one potential concern for Congress is the absence of a plan for replacing the Polar Star upon completion of its seven- to 10-year life after it returns to service in late 2012. That is why Rep. Frank LoBiondo, R-New Jersey, included the provision to decommission the Polar Star , said spokesman Jason Galanes. "We absolutely support the Arctic icebreaker mission," Galanes said. "We're forcing this decision rather then allowing the administration to kick the can down the road." In a statement, the Office of Management and Budget said the administration "strongly opposes" the provision, and that the repairs to the Polar Star "will stabilize the United States' existing polar fleet until longterm icebreaking capability requirements are finalized." Regardless of the outcome of the dispute, a gap in icebreaking
capabilities is almost certain, according to the CRS report. Following any decision to design and build new icebreakers, the first replacement polar icebreaker might enter service in eight to 10 years, the report says.

90

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: Oil
Coast Guard icebreaker presence in the arctic key to resolve Arctic catastrophes.
Sullivan 3/26/12. John A. Sullivan, news editor for
Oil and Gas Investor. Coast Guard Muscles Up Arctic Presence in Advance of Drilling. Natural Gas Week. Lexis. http://www.lexisnexis.com/lnacui2api/returnTo.do?returnToKey=20_T15105743963

Faced with patrolling a gradually opening Arctic frontier north of Alaska, the US Coast Guard is also faced with another task -- providing security for the energy companies planning on drilling for oil and gas in the region. Shell Oil has plans to drill three wells in the Chukchi Sea and two wells in the Beaufort Sea during the next two summer drilling seasons. For the Coast Guard, that means adding more muscle to its forces in Alaska including a major exercise called Arctic Shield 2012 to test its oil spill response abilities. The Coast Guard is also moving two cutters to patrol the Chukchi Sea where they will monitor vessels moving through the Bering Strait and the Beaufort Sea. The cutters expected to take on this duty are the
282-foot <em>Alex Haley</em>, currently homeported in Kodiak, Alaska; and the 420-foot <em>Bertholf</em> which calls Alameda, California, its homeport. While on patrol, the two vessels will use Dutch Harbor as a refueling and resupply base. The Coast Guard is also moving two Jayhawk helicopters to Barrow, Alaska, where they will be able to respond to emergencies in the region. The Coast Guard is also building a new communications center in the area. The two cutters will also be able to provide security for the vessels that will be used by Shell for its drilling projects. Shell's vessels will be operating out of Dutch Harbor and have already been involved in one highly public incident where Greenpeace activists boarded the <em>Noble Discoverer </em>while it was attempting to leave the Port of Taranaki, New Zealand. Shell has the drillship under contract to drill its exploratory Chukchi wells. Greenpeace teams also were trying to stop vessels from the North Sea under contract by Shell to begin their voyage to Alaska. Activists boarded the <em>Fennica </em>and <em>Nordica</em>, two Arctic-class icebreakers

under contract by Shell and hung banners protesting the drilling before leaving the vessels

91

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: Canada Relations


US-Canada relations remain resilient Therere at an all time high KENNEDY, JULY 5, 2012 (Mark Kennedy, U.S.-Canada relationship 'has never been
stronger,' says American ambassador, http://www.canada.com/business/Canada+relationship+never+been+stronger+says+American +ambassador/6889006/story.html, Post media news) DG OTTAWA The American ambassador to Canada has issued a reassuring statement about the state of relations between the two countries insisting that while there have been "bumps in the road" and "strains", the relationship has never been better. David Jacobson's written message was issued this week to
commemorate the national birthdays of both countries. Notably, it came just days after a controversial article by two Canadians who declared the bilateral relationship has sunk to its worst level in decades. The document, entitled "How Obama Lost Canada" appears in the online edition of Foreign Affairs and makes a detailed case for how U.S. President

Jacobson, while not referring to that article directly, cited a long list of examples from security co-operation and increased trade, to the Americans' heavy reliance on Canadian energy exports to conclude that things aren't so bad. "I believe the
Barack Obama is "botching relations with the United States' biggest trade partner." But

relationship between the United States and Canada has never been stronger, " wrote Jacobson in the message posted on the embassy's website. "On so many fronts we are working together to achieve our shared goals: managing our border for greater efficiency and greater security; expanding trade for greater prosperity; and enhancing peace and security around the world." Jacobson wrote he is extending a clear message on behalf of Obama and the American people : "We are very lucky to have Canada as our neighbor." "None of this is to say that everything is perfect or that we do not on occasion have some bumps in the road. The economic challenges we face, particularly in my country, have, at times, caused strains. "And it's inconceivable that two sovereign nations with the largest economic relationship between two countries in the history of the world, two countries with the longest shared border in the world, would not have issues from time-to-time. But like the friends we are, we address those issues and we try to resolve them forthrightly ." That assessment is far rosier than the picture painted in the Foreign Affairs essay written by Derek Burney, Canada's former ambassador to the U.S., and Fen Hampson, a
foreign policy expert at Carleton University. "Whether on trade, the environment, or Canada's shared contribution in places such as Afghanistan, time and again the United States has jilted its northern neighbour," they write. "If the pattern of neglect continues, Ottawa will get less interested in co-operating with Washington. Already, Canada has reacted by turning elsewhere namely, toward Asia for more reliable economic partners." The authors note that only 68 per cent of Canadian exports were destined for the United States in 2010, down from 85 per cent in 2000. The biting essay points to a litany of problems, such as: - The Obama administration "caved to environmental activists" by postponing a decision to allow the Keystone XL pipeline from Alberta to the Gulf Coast; - The White House "jeopardized" the important Canadian-American economic relationship by failing to combat the Buy American provision in a stimulus bill in Congress; - The U.S. has "violated the substance and spirit" of NAFTA and meetings between the prime minister and president have "mostly fallen by the wayside"; - Canada's military involvement in operations such as Afghanistan were significant, and yet there have

While last year's "Beyond the Border" deal aimed at improving security and cross-border traffic was initially "good news", it has yet to deliver much of substance; But Jacobson is much more positive. He noted that Prime Minister Stephen Harper praised the recent agreement for the
been few "tangible benefits" in return from the U.S. Detroit-Windsor bridge as a visionary project that will increase trade. As well, the Canadian Parliament adopted a "long-awaited" copyright reform bill. Also in June,

Obama and Harper announced Canada has been invited to join negotiations in the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a proposed free-trade agreement. Jacobson cast a positive light on trade saying that from 2009 to 2011, trade between the U.S.and Canada increased by 37.8 per cent, or $188.7 billion. In the wake of the Keystone XL decision, Harper declared Canada will look to other markets, such as Asia, to sell its oil. But Jacobson pointed to the close energy ties as an example of a strong bilateral relationship. "Canada remains the overwhelmingly largest foreign supplier of every form of energy to the United States," he wrote. " You send us virtually 100 per cent of the electricity we import; 85 per cent of the natural gas; and stunningly 27 per cent of our foreign oil. The next highest foreign source of oil is Saudi Arabia at 12 per cent!!!

92

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: Canada Relations


Canada is dependent upon US coop, will maintain relations in the name of Canadian sovereignty
Zachary Fillingham

12 (Staff writer for the Geopolitical Moniter, Jun 18, 12, Canadas Arctic Defense Policy: Grand Theory, Stunted Practice. http://www.geopoliticalmonitor.com/canadas-arctic-defense-policy-grand-theory-stuntedpractice-4691/) However, this is not to say that the Arctic has completely dropped off the political radar. The Canadian government is still looking for cost-effective ways to assert its sovereignty in the region. Recent reports suggest that the

Harper government is considering a proposal to buy three high-altitude unmanned drones to patrol the Northwest Passage. These could go a long way in monitoring international shipping traffic and possible breaches of Arctic sovereignty, though as other projects have indicated- theres a huge gulf in Canada between announcements and deployment.The Canadian government is

well aware that it is falling short of what is required to create a credible independent military presence in the Arctic, so it may look to its neighbour in the south to help rectify the situation. The United States is feeling its own pinch on defense spending, making it reluctant to commit on its own icebreakers. Thus, its possible that Canada and the US could come together and pool their resources in a coordinated North American take on Arctic security ala NORAD. And perhaps this kind of American involvement is exactly what Canada needs to get the US on board for supporting Canadian sovereignty over the Northwest Passage.

US-Canada Relation decline is empirically denied we have not consulted 2 times and never seen an impact
BYERS 2012 (MICHAEL February 6Toward a Canada-Russia Axis in the Arctic
http://globalbrief.ca/blog/2012/02/06/toward-a-canada-russia-axis-in-the-arctic/) Canada takes the view that the Northwest Passage constitutes internal waters, where the full force of its domestic law applies. Internal waters are not territorial waters, and there is no right at international law to access them without the permission of the coastal state. Internal waters

arise in bays or along fragmented coastlines through the long-term acquiescence of other countries and/or by the drawing of straight baselines between headlands in accordance with a judgment of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in the 1951 AngloNorwegian Fisheries Case. The US insists that the Northwest Passage is an international strait,

according to criteria set out by the ICJ in the 1949 Corfu Channel Case namely, that its geographical situation [connects] two parts of the high seas and the fact [that it is] being used for international navigation. Foreign vessels sailing through an international strait necessarily pass within 12 nautical miles of one or more

coastal states, but instead of the regular right of innocent passage through territorial waters, they benefit from an enhan ced right of transit passage. This entitles them to pass through the strait without coastal state permission, while

also freeing them from other constraints. For instance, foreign submarines may sail submerged through an international strait something that they are not allowed to do in regular territorial waters. On two occasions, the US has sent surface vessels through the Northwest Passage without seeking Canadas consent: the SS Manhattan, an American owned-and-registered ice-strengthened super-tanker in 1969; and the USCGC (US Coast Guard Cutter) Polar Sea, a coastguard icebreaker in 1985. Most Canadian specialists argue that these two transits are insufficient to fulfill
the used for international navigation criterion. American analysts respond that the ICJ did not specify a threshold with some of them even arguing that prospective use is itself enough.

93

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: Canada Relations


Relations low now keystone proves Burney and Hampson 6/21/12 How Obama Lost Canada Botching Relations With the United States Biggest
Trade Partner Derek H. Burney a former ambassador to the United States and Fen Osler Hampson and Carleton University academic in the American periodical Foreign June 21, 2012 http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/137744/derek-h-burney-andfen-osler-hampson/how-obama-lost-canada

Permitting the construction of the Keystone XL pipeline should have been an easy diplomatic and economic decision for U.S. President Barack Obama. The completed project would have shipped more

than 700,000 barrels a day of Albertan oil to refineries in the Gulf Coast, generated tens of thousands of jobs for U.S. workers, and met the needs of refineries in Texas that are desperately seeking oil from Canada, a more reliable supplier than Venezuela or countries in the Middle East. The project posed little risk to the landscape it traversed. But instead of acting on economic

logic, the Obama administration caved to environmental activists in November 2011, postponing until 2013 the decision on whether to allow the pipeline. Obamas choice marked a triumph of campaign posturing over pragmatism and diplomacy, and it brought U.S.-Canadian relations to their lowest point in decade s. It was hardly the first time that the administration has fumbled issues with Ottawa. Although relations have been civil, they have rarely been productive. Whether on trade, the environment, or Canadas shared contribution in places such as Afghanistan, time and again the United States has jilted its northern neighbor. If the pattern of neglect continues, Ottawa will get less interested in cooperating with Washington. Already, Canada has reacted by turning elsewhere -- namely, toward Asia -- for more reliable economic partners.

US and Canada relations are low now empirics.


CBS News, 10(8/20/10, global news network that writes about main issues, Battle for the
Arctic heats up, http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2009/02/27/f-arcticsovereignty.html) The most direct challenge to Canada's sovereignty in Arctic waters came in 1985, when the U.S. sent its icebreaker Polar Sea through the Northwest Passage without informing Canada or asking permission. The political skirmish that followed led to the 1988 Arctic Co-operation Agreement between the two countries. Boiled down to its essence, the agreement said the U.S. would not send any more icebreakers through the passage without Canada's consent, and Canada would always give that consent. The wider issue of whether Canada's Arctic waters were internal or international was left unresolved. While most of the Arctic sovereignty disputes are Canada-U.S. affairs, Denmark has also weighed in. The Danish navy recently occupied Hans Island, a barren hunk of rock between Ellesmere Island and Greenland that Canada claims as its territory. For now, the countries agree to disagree on Hans Island's status. The dispute over whether Canada has sovereignty over Arctic waters might seem like an academic dispute. After all, they are locked in ice for the vast majority of the year.

94

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: Canada Relations


The US and Canadian relations are high; cooperation on icebreakers proves
Michael Valliant 12, (Acquisition Directorate -- May 5, 2012, U.S. and Canadian Coast Guard collaborate on acquisition.http://www.uscg.mil/servicelines/archive/20120505CanadianAcq.asp) When it comes to Coast Guard acquisition, the United States and Canada have a lot to talk about . And with officials from the Canadian Coast Guard traveling to U.S. Coast Guard Headquarters and members of the surface program recently
visiting Ottawa, Ontario, the conversation is picking up. The Canadian Coast Guard Ship Louis S. St-Laurent makes an approach to the Coast Guard Cutter Healy in the Arctic Ocean Sept. 5, 2009.

The two ships are taking part in a multi-year, multi-agency Arctic survey that will help define the Arctic continental shelf.In January, Michel Vermette, the Canadian Coast Guards deputy commissioner for vessel procurement
the equivalent to the U.S. Coast Guard's Assistant Commandant for Acquisition visited Washington to brief Deputy Commandant for Mission Support Vice Adm. John Currier, key acquisition personnel, and Dana Goward, the director of marine transportation systems management about the Canadian Coast Guards polar icebreaker program. Cmdr. Tim Newton, the assistant project manager for polar capabilities, currently part of In-Service Vessel Sustainment, was one of the acquisition representatives in

Mr. Vermette briefed us on the Canadian Coast Guards national shipbuilding strategy and specifically the polar icebreaker program, Newton said. They announced their polar icebreaker program in 2008. So if you say we started ours this year, they are four years ahead of us. One of our biggest benefits from working with them could be getting our polar icebreaker requirements developed more quickly. We may be able to compress the time it takes to get good requirements if we can incorporate some of the lessons learned from the
attendance. Canadian Coast Guard.On Feb. 29, it was the Acquisition Directorate's turn to visit Canadian Coast Guard headquarters in Ot tawa. Surface Program Manager Capt. Lisa Festa, Polar Icebreaker Replacement Interim Project Manager Ken King and Newton made presentations on the Fast Response Cutter, the role of the Project Resident Office, the 225foot Seagoing Buoy Tender and the U.S. Coast Guards surface acquisition portfolio. In return, the Canadian Coast Guard briefed Festa, King and Newton on their flee t renewal plan and recapitalization projects for a polar icebreaker, the Multi-Tasked Vessel and offshore patrol vessel, as well as Canadas National Shipbuilding Procurement Strategy.The Canadian Coast Guard is building the first of their Mid -Shore Patrol Vessels, which is a Damen parent-craft, a similar hull to our FRC, Newton said. And as part of their national fleet recapitalization, they are looking at some medium-endurance MTVs, which could look a lot like our 225s. Mr. King, who was actually Capt. King when we finished production of the 225s, was the project manager for those, so he was able to talk about that project. Talk s in Ottawa concluded with identifying multiple initiatives for further discussion and planning for a potential joint visit to the Canadian Coast Guards MSPV production line at Irving Ship building in Halifax, Nova Scotia, this spring. An

Collaboration between the two governments began in June 2009, when the U.S. and Canada signed a memorandum of understanding recognizing that both countries had a common interest in the design and construction techniques of ships and could mutually benefit from sharing information on research, design, analysis, development, testing and evaluation of ship design and construction techniques. The agreement also outlines possible ways the Coast Guards might work together. King said the visit made clear that the two services can collaborate such that the accomplishments and strengths of each benefit the other.The Canadian Coast Guard is well under way on their fleet
annual summit between the two services is also set for this summer at Victoria, British Columbia.

recapitalization plan, but they have not recently procured vessels like we have, King said. I think they can leverage some of the expert ise we generated over the last 10 years in the set up of our current acquisition organization. At the same time, they are well ahead of us on the recapitalization of a heavy polar icebreaking capability. We may realize significant benefits, in the future and at the proper point in our major systems acquisition process, if we take advantage of the work theyve completed.

Canada plans to militarize the arctic hurting US Canada relations


Griffeths [Writer for the Globe and Mail] 02-22-06 Breaking the ice on Canada-U.S. Arctic
co-operation http://www.theglobeandmail.com/commentary/breaking-the-ice-on-canada-usarctic-co-operation/article727956/ Prime Minister Harper is surely doing the right thing in seeking a radical improvement in Canada-U.S. relations. The same applies to his appointment of Michael Wilson as Canadian ambassador. But if the Prime Minister and our man in Washington are to turn things around, the Prime Minister will have to undo one of his election pledges. This is the pledge, made December 22, to defend Canada's Arctic sovereignty by military means. Specifically, Mr. Harper undertook to place anti-submarine sensors in the Northwest Passage, and to build and deploy three heavy, troop-carrying naval icebreakers to enforce Canada's exclusive jurisdiction in its Arctic waters.

95

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: Coast Guard Tradeoff


Coast guard already cutting operational programs increased spending spurs more tradeoffs
Korb, et al 2010. Lawrence J. Korb, former assistant Secretary of Defense, Sean Duggan, a
Research Associate for national security at the Center for American Progress, Laura Conley, Research Assistant for National Security and International Policy. June 2010. Building a U.S. Coast Guard for the 21st Century. Center for American Progress. http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2010/06/pdf/coast_guard.pdf As a result of an already constrained fiscal environment, the Coast Guard is engaged in making difficult trade-offs even before any further possible cuts to its budget are made. The recently retired Coast Guard Commandant Thad Allen says the service is now shifting funding away from programs that support current operational capacity in order to focus scarce resources on asset modernization and recapitalization programs. This is the same trade-off that confronted his immediate predecessors, Adms. Thomas Collins and James Loy. Meanwhile, the service has lowered its performance goals in anticipation that it will not be able to meet previous standards as a result of major asset

96

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: Private Actor CP


Private companies in Alaska willing to bid for the job and get it done faster and cheaper
DeMarban, Writer/Contributor Alaska Journal of Commerce, 2012 (Should Alaska take
the lead in financing new icebreakers? Alex, Apr 11, Alaska Dispatch, http://www.alaskadispatch.com/article/should-alaska-take-lead-financing-newicebreakers?page=full)KW Jim Hemsath, deputy director at the Alaska Industrial and Development Authority (AIDEA), said the financing agency hasn't been involved in discussions with the governor about paying for icebreakers. But one option could include state-issued bonds, a concept that wouldn't necessarily involve AIDEA, he said. The agency could be involved by assessing the market for an icebreaker, he said. Would Shell, for example, consider renting an icebreaker when it begins exploratory drilling, possibly this summer? "Too early to comment on the commercial appeal of an Alaskaowned Arctic vessel," said Curtis Smith, a Shell spokesman, in an email. A new icebreaker could cost $900 million, while refurbishing the Polar Sea or Polar Star could run $500 million apiece, according to the Congressional Research Service. Michael

Terminel of shipbuilder Edison Chouest Offshore said his company might be interested in working with the state in developing an icebreaker if it won that right through a competitive bidding process. Edison, based in Cut Off, La., has built four icebreakers, including the Nanuq and Aiviq, to support Shell's proposed drilling operations in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas. The Aiviq was built relatively quickly and for a little more than $200 million -- considerably less than the Coast Guard estimates for a new icebreaker. "We're open to looking at all business opportunities," Terminel said. Chouest companies have been huge donors to Young and other members of the Alaska delegation. Some state lawmakers, such as Sen. Lesil McGuire, have also called for Alaska-owned icebreakers.

Private actors cant own ships, destroys sovereignty and foreign policy incentives
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World:An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) The committee was asked to consider alternative ship ownership options. Considering the McMurdo break-in mission alone, the committee found that to best meet mission assurance requirements, only a U.S.flagged, U.S.-owned, and U.S.-operated ship provides sufficiently reliable control. While that ship might
be leased commercially through a long-term lease-build arrangement, from a total fleet perspective it may be more cost-effective if science mission users pay only incremental costsas has been the case in the pastand if the U.S. Coast Guard provides McMurdo resupply support from the multimission icebreaker fleet. Also,

the sovereign presence of the United States is not well served by a leased ship. Lease arrangements do not ensure that the United States could assert its foreign policy will at times and places of its choosing.

97

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: Private Actor CP


Fed key to negotiate the future of the icebreakers
Robertson VP of the Adfero Group 1/18 (Jeff, Security Debrief, Need an Icebreaker? The
Coast Guard Does, http://securitydebrief.com/2012/01/18/need-an-icebreaker-the-coastguard-does/, DOA: 7/9) As the U.S. fleet of icebreakers continues to age and fall behind the worlds arctic maritime community, the vision and fortitude of U.S. decision makers continues to wane. The recent announcement by Shell Oil to launch their $200 million arctic icebreaker in April 2012 should send a shiver up the spine of every Coastguardsman and mariner who has considered how the United States will deal with the future of operations in the high latitudes. Year after year and exercise after exercise, the U.S. Coast Guard and Navy continue to identify the need for U.S. icebreakers either new or repaired mothballed fleet. The M/V AIVIQ is intended to support Shells arctic oil exploration and has been built to withstand the rigorous demands of the Arctic ice and remote operations. One can only scratch ones head and wonder how this ship could be designed, constructed and launched in less th an 3 years, and the U.S. Congress, Coast Guard and maritime industry has been unable to agree on a plan to replace the broken USCG icebreaker fleet for the past several decades. It is time to get serious and put our money where our long-term national security priorities are in the Arctic.

Priv CP fails doesn't meet the capacity of even MEDIUM icebreakers ORourke, specialist in naval affairs, 6/14. Ronald ORourke Coast Guard Polar

Icebreaker Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress. Congressional Research Service. http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/weapons/RL34391.pdf Healy is a bit larger than Polar Star and Polar Seait is 420 feet long and displaces about 16,000 tons. Compared to Polar Star and Polar Sea, Healy has less icebreaking capability (it is considered a medium polar icebreaker), but more capability for supporting scientific research. The ship can break through ice up to 4 feet thick at a speed of 3 knots, and embark a scientific research staff of 35 (with room for another 15 surge personnel and two visitors). The ship is used primarily for supporting scientific research in the Arctic.

Privatization fails their limited capabilities simply arent enough to solve


Kroh et al, 12. Kiley Kroh, Associate Director for Ocean Communications at the Center for
American Progress, Michael Conathan, Director of Ocean Policy at the Center for American Progress, and Emma Huvos, February 2012. Putting a Freeze on Arctic Ocean Drilling. Center for American Progress. http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2012/02/pdf/arcticreport.pdf Even though Shell announced plans to construct its own customized icebreaking ship, icebreaking capacity in the Arctic would still be well below the amount recommended by the 2010 High Latitude Study, which projects that the Coast Guard needs three heavy and three medium icebreaking vessels in order to fulfill its statutory mission requirements in the Arctic. 83,

98

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: States CP
Alaska should work in junction with the US for optimal financing and efficacy
DeMarban, Writer/Contributor Alaska Journal of Commerce, 2012 (Should Alaska take
the lead in financing new icebreakers? Alex, Apr 11, Alaska Dispatch, http://www.alaskadispatch.com/article/should-alaska-take-lead-financing-newicebreakers?page=full)KW Gov. Sean Parnell says the state might be interested in helping finance a new icebreaker so the U.S. can make up lost ground in the race for Arctic dominance. That's the gist of the governor's response to a lengthy letter from Rep. Don Young offering ideas on how Alaska can help the cash-strapped federal government put costly new icebreakers off Alaska's increasingly busy northern coasts. With the nation's icebreaking fleet reduced to a single working ship -- its two large icebreakers are undergoing repairs or being decommissioned -- the state and U.S. government should consider sharing costs to make new icebreakers a reality, Young suggested in a Feb. 7 letter to Parnell. New
warming but often ice-choked Arctic.

or refurbished icebreakers will cost hundreds of millions of dollars. More ships are plowing through the Bering Strait as sailing seasons lengthen in the

The U.S. Coast Guard predicts traffic will continue growing as shipping, resource development and tourism expands. But the Healy, a "medium duty" icebreaker that escorted a Russian fuel tanker to
It is clear that we

Nome this winter, is the Coast Guard's lone functioning icebreaker. 'Creative financing' "Without access to heavy icebreakers, we will be unable to adapt to historic changes in the Arctic," Young wrote. "Icebreakers are critical for ensuring safe shipping and resource operations and providing for field research opportunities." He continues: "Given the current fiscal climate in D.C., funding the acquisition of new vessels presents a significant challenge.

must consider creative financing and ownership options to move forward." In addition to the state should also think about owning an icebreaker with private firms. The state could refurbish the Polar Sea or the Polar Star. It could then lease its icebreakers to the Coast Guard and National Science Foundation, wrote Young.
helping bankroll the project,

The U.S. Coast Guard must have icebreakers to remain competitive with 8 different polar powers including Russia and Canada.
Treadwell, 13th and current Lieutenant Governor of Alaska and former Chair of the U.S. Arctic Research Commission, 6 (Mead, CQ Congressional Testimony, REPORT ON
ICEBREAKERS, Lexis Nexis, DOA: 7-11-12) With respect to icebreakers and the Federal icebreaking mission, USARC works with other agencies, and the Arctic statute reads, "The Office of Management and Budget shall seek to facilitate planning for the design, procurement, maintenance, deployment, and operations of icebreakers needed to provide a platform for Arctic research by allocating all funds necessary to support icebreaking operations, except for recurring incremental costs associated with specific projects, to the Coast Guard." Over the past several years, the USARC has communicated to the President (see letter attached), to Congress, and to other entities, including the National Academies, the importance of maintaining a fleet of icebreaking vessels to the U.S., and is one of only eight Arctic nations, including Russia, Canada, Sweden, Norway, Denmark (Greenland), Iceland, and Finland. Alaska is our nation's Arctic territory, and the gateway to the high north.

99

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: States CP
Scientific research, primacy, trade, and U.S. sovereignty are four independent reasons icebreakers must stay federal
Treadwell, 13th and current Lieutenant Governor of Alaska and former Chair of the U.S. Arctic Research Commission, 6 (Mead, CQ Congressional Testimony, REPORT ON
ICEBREAKERS, Lexis Nexis, DOA: 7-11-12) While scientific research may be our particular purview, we also recognize that such a fleet is a vital part of the nation's strategic presence in the polar regions. The Arctic environment is changing rapidly, as reported daily in the global press. Climate change is presenting both challenges and opportunities, such as improved prospects for research, enhanced access to natural resources, and favorable circumstances for marine transportation via previously ice-infested passageways and polar routes. These changes are not going unnoticed by our fellow Arctic nations, and activities ranging from scientific research to commercial development are increasing apace. I would like to make these 4 specific points regarding the necessity of a Federal icebreaker fleet. 1. Vital for scientific research. Because icebreakers conduct operations in ice-covered waters that no other ships can perform, they are essential to the support of research in high latitudes, not only as research platforms, but also to
enable access to and support of research facilities locked within permanent ice pack of the polar seas. Because the Coast Guard icebreakers are aging, the National Science Foundation has had little choice but to charter a Russian commercial icebreaker for Antarctic work, and a Swedish icebreaker is likely to be leased by NSF next year for work at both poles. Shouldn't a US federal icebreaker fleet be supporting our research and polar interests? 2. National presence in polar waters. US Coast

Guard icebreakers maintain our national presence in both the Arctic and the Antarctic in support of the US policy in the Antarctic and our standing in the Antarctic Treaty organizations.

Cana-da's Prime Minister, Stephen Harper, has become particularly vocal about sovereignty issues. He has proposed the pur-chase of three new heavy icebreakers to be based in a new port near Iqualuit, and the addition of 500 personnel in Canada's north. In a speech in Winnipeg last December 22, he said, "As Prime Minister, I will make it plain to foreign governments - including the United States - that naval vessels traveling in Canadian waters will require the consent of the government of Canada." (from "Breaking the Ice on Canada-U.S. Arctic Co-operation, by Franklyn Griffiths, Globe and Mail, February 22, 2006). We also need to consider our domestic waters in the great state of Alaska. Alaska's coastline constitutes roughly half of the nation's total. Enforcing the nation's laws and protecting the marine environment requires polar icebreakers. We also have a growing need for an oil spill response system in the Arctic, which requires icebreaker support. 3. Marine access and shipping is increasing. As waterways in

the Arctic open up, due to the melting and retreat of sea ice, support of Arctic transportation (which shortens shipping distances and times, and are thus of significant economic interest) will become more important as will the nation's need to maintain freedom of navigation in these regions. As Arctic sea ice disappears during the summer months over the next 50 years, marine access will open up, and routes
across the polar ocean could shorten the distance between Europe and Asia for commercial shipping. With this potential increase in Arctic shipping comes a greater US responsibility for environmental protection, search and rescue, navigation, safety, and overall security of the Bering Strait region and Alaska's coastal seas. 4. Claims to extend US sovereignty in the Arctic.

Whether or not the US accedes to the Convention on the Law of the Sea, we must conduct surveys of our nation's extended continental shelf in order to support our claims of sovereignty. Many of these regions are rich in natural resources, and if they are to be developed, we will need to know

definitively if these areas are part of the United States. Many regions requiring surveys are adjacent to Alaska, in ice-infested waters, accessible by icebreakers.

100

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: States CP
To remain competitive in the Arctic Ocean the U.S. requires a federal fleet.
Treadwell, 13th and current Lieutenant Governor of Alaska and former Chair of the U.S. Arctic Research Commission, 6 (Mead, CQ Congressional Testimony, REPORT ON
ICEBREAKERS, Lexis Nexis, DOA: 7-11-12) Of all the world's oceans, the Arctic Ocean is the last frontier, a mare incognitum. It's a demanding place, remote, and operations in this region are expensive. Nevertheless, due to a rapidly changing environment, the Arctic is a region of great opportunity. Access is improving, and will continue to do so. Nine out of ten people in the world live on the con-tinents that surround the Arctic Ocean, which means this area will not go unnoticed in the 21st century. An icebreaker fleet is a national asset and is an important element of broad national interest. A fleet is required to meet national needs in scientific research, national and homeland security, sustainable use of resources, maritime activity, and sovereignty.
NSF's Dr. Bement cites a daily operational cost of $100,000 for icebreaker Healy. This should be a challenge to all involved: what combination of crewing configuration, long-term maintenance, cost sharing on

We require US ships in the sea and the missions they accomplish. Most of the vessels in the existing fleet are near, or at the end of their lifespan and refurbishment is not prudent. A new fleet of polar class icebreakers is required, and it must be a
missions, and other factors may be called into play to reduce this figure? In summary, the US cannot meet these needs with flags, rhetoric, outsourcing abroad, and public affairs campaigns.

Federal fleet rather than one created entirely through private enterprise.

101

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: Refurbish CP
Cant refurbish ships; similar costs but far less effective
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World:An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) The committee was asked in what manner to acquire ships. The benefits of constructing a new ship were compared to overhauling and extending the life of POLAR STAR or POLAR SEA. A socalled service life extension program (SLEP) involves wholesale replacement of the propulsion plant and of auxiliary, control, and habitation support systems. While the cost of a new hull could be avoided, the retrofit of most systems would be costly and limited by the constraints of the existing hull. The committee recommends new construction for several reasons. There is effective, new technologyparticularly new hull designsthat could not be retrofitted to an existing ship. The hull and ship interior structure limit retrofit design choices, thus diminishing capability. The committee estimates that a SLEP would likely cost at a minimum more than half of a new construction cost. Some SLEP programs have overrun their budgets and have cost as much as the construction of a new ship. A newly designed ship would also meet more stringent environmental standards than the current ships.

102

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: Foreign Country Contract CP


Only short-term solution and links to politics
Foreign Policy Blogs Network, December 7 (2011, Congressional Subcommittee on
Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation holds hearing on icebreakers, Lexis)KW In the Arctic, the Coast Guard's icebreaker deficit could affect four out of the eleven missions it has : Defense Readi-ness, Ice Operations, Marine Environmental Protection, and Ports, Waterways, and Coastal Security. The USCG estimates it will take eight to ten years to design and build a new icebreaker. Since the Polar Sea will only last for approximately that time, at most, many advocate that the U.S. should start designing a new icebreaker immediately. The USCG presented findings of an independent third-party regarding icebreakers to Congress on November 1, 2011. It will cost $859 million to construct a new polar class icebreaker and $1.2 billion to reconstruct the Polar Sea or Polar Star from scratch to the current standard for heavy icebreakers. These current USCG budget cannot fund these projects, so funding from other agencies will be necessary. However, David Whitcomb, Chief Operating Officer of Vigor Industrial, the company

repairing the Polar Star, testified on Thursday on behalf of the Shipbuilders' Council of America that the engine of the mothballed Polar Sea could be fixed for as little as $11 million. This would add another seven to ten years to the ship's lifespan. Even if it is fixed soon, this still puts the U.S. in the same time crunch eventually, where by as soon as 2018 the U.S.

could again be without icebreakers, and this time for a decade while a new one is designed. China was able to simply purchase an icebreaker from the Ukraine. While the U.S. is content to lease icebreakers from other countries, it does not seem like an actual purchase of maritime or military equipment from another country would go over as well in Washington.

Over time the cost to rent foreign cutters would pay for a new ship or repairs on old ones- we are at the hand of other nations
Foreign Policy Blogs Network, December 7 (2011, Congressional Subcommittee on
Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation holds hearing on icebreakers, Lexis)KW The Polar Star and Polar Sea's main missions include supporting National Science Foundation research in Antarctica. However, they have not assisted in a mission to Antarctica since 2007. Since then, the NSF has paid $8 million annually to Russia and Sweden for use of their icebreakers. This situation draws a parallel to the country's lack of space shuttles, which has caused it to rely on Russian Soyuz rockets to reach the International Space Station. This year, the U.S. was counting on Sweden's icebreaker Oden for its annual Antarctic breakout, but Stockholm decided that it needed to keep the ship at home to patrol sea lanes. Without any active icebreakers, not only does the U.S. have to rely on a tight global supply. Coast Guard members' skills at operating icebreakers grow rustier as they lose at-sea time and hands-on training, too.

103

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: Foreign Country Contract CP


Icebreakers are in high demand world-wide, makes renting or leasing ships nearly impossible
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World:An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) A workshop on marine transportation in the Arctic (Arctic Marine Transport Workshop, 2004) suggested that it is plausible to expect increased marine tourism as cruise ships venture further north following the retreat of the ice edge. There has also been an increase in oil and gas tanker traffic, particularly in the Siberian Arctic and sub-Arctic. It is
also likely that resource exploration, recovery, and shipping activities will expand into previously inaccessible areas. Several companies have begun to develop the extensive oil and gas fields near Sakhalin (Mikko Niini, personal communication, 2005) and the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas. These

companies have begun to charter the majority of existing icebreakers for the foreseeable future, which could create a scarcity of these types of ships on the world market. In addi tion, many orders for double-acting tankersships that can both break ice and transport cargohave been placed and demand is expected to grow (Mikko Niini, personal communication, 2005)

Were too reliant on other countries aging kills competitiveness


Venzke Retired Rear Admiral, U.S. Coast Guard 9 (Norm, icebreaker sailor, severed on four
icebreakers, March, http://www.michaelyon-online.com/images/pdf/icebreakers.pdf, We Need More Icebreakers!) T he United States icebreaker fleet is absolutely inadequate. That opinion is supported by the fact that the fleet is incapable of meeting mission requirements without a chartered foreign icebreaker. Why is the
United States in this position? Polar icebreakers are very expensive to build and support and, therefore, are neither popular nor of high priority within the appropriate federal agencies. One of the three Coast Guard icebreakers, the Healy (WAGB-20) is new, very capable, and well equipped for research but not the most powerful. The Polar Star (WAGB-10) and Polar Sea (WAGB-11) are quite powerful, but are more than 30 years old. Furthermore, the Polar Star has been placed in commissionspecial status and would require almost a year to be restored to operational status even on an emergency upgrade schedule. Thus, the United States effectively has only two polar icebreakers, the Healy and the Polar Sea. All polar icebreaking is hazardous even with the stoutest and most powerful ships manned by experienced professionals. The only remedy for crippling ice damage and delays due to long shipyard availabilities are back-up icebreakers. Also, ship scheduling is complicated by less-than-precise ice forecastsis it a light or heavy ice year or, in other words, will one or two icebreakers be required? Further, those considerations are complicated by the vast distances between homeport, the Arctic, Antarctica, and repair facilities. Operations in the western Arctic involve the fulfilling of statutory requirements and the need for both research and a national presence in an area of increased international interest. Apparently, the Healy is deemed adequate for the current level of operations. But she is only one ship, not immune from damage and delays and can only operate in one place at a given time. Given that diminishing ice will result in increased foreign shipping in the United States area of interest, its obvious that an additional icebreaker will be needed. Now is the time to plan for that vessel with recognition that even more might be required to support our future requirements. Presumably, the Canadian Coast Guard will continue providing icebreaker support for the annual Thule (Greenland) Air Base resupply as long as it is needed. If not, additional icebreaker support would be necessary for that mission. Operations in Antarctica include the annual McMurdo base resupply that is vital and must be accomplished by sea during a narrow window of time. Without it, the U.S. Antarctic Research Program of the National Science Foundation would grind to a halt except for the virtually ice-free Palmer Station. Whether one or two icebreakers are required at McMurdo depends on the ice year, heavy or light. In 2006, ice conditions were forecast to be relatively light. Otherwise, a Russian icebreaker, the Krasin, would not have been chartered and scheduled for a solo break-in. Ultimately, she aborted that mission due to ice damage (a broken propeller blade). That necessitated an emergency deployment of the Polar

The insufficiency of U.S. icebreakers is again exemplified by the necessity to charter a Swedish icebreaker to support the 2008-09 McMurdo resupply. Absent knowledge of future plans and prioritizing of missions, one can only conclude that two operational Coast Guard icebreakers (even if a foreign charter were guaranteed) are grossly inadequate for supporting both Arctic and Antarctic operations. Polar-class replacements might
Star on an estimated 7,000-mile transit to complete resupply at McMurdo. At that time, the Polar Sea was in the yard. not be available for at least eight years. Therefore, it would appear prudent to repair the Polar Star and return her to service as an interim measure. Although that increase to three would improve the situation, it would not solve the problem. Therefore, planning

should provide for the expedited replacement of the two Polar-class icebreakers as well as a backup for the Healy. Finally, the Coast Guards cadre of icebreakerqualified operating a nd design personnel has been diminished because of the small fleet. The United States simply does not possess an icebreaker fleet commensurate with its national needs. Corrective action must commence as soon as possible. Otherwise, the aging fleet will continue its decline and actually become a dying breed and the success of vital national missions will suffer accordingly.

104

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: LOST CP
The United States needs to strengthen its claim to the arctic before commercial waters are opened up for trade and control.
CBC News 2010 (August 20th, Battle for the Arctic heats up)
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2009/02/27/f-arctic-sovereignty.html The dispute over whether Canada has sovereignty over Arctic waters might seem like an academic dispute. After all, they are locked in ice for the vast majority of the year. But there are two main issues to consider. The first deals with security. Even though the Arctic waterway is frozen over most of the year, military subs are able to make the trip year-round by simply diving under the ice (and there are reports that many countries have secretly sent their subs through). Right now, we cannot routinely detect submarine transits though those waters. Critics say the world is right to wonder how we can claim an area as our sovereign territory if we don't patrol or monitor it more thoroughly. The second point is about the ice. Plainly put, the Arctic ice is thinning at an alarming rate. Because of global warming, there are predictions that the Northwest Passage could be open for large parts of the summer in as little as 15 years. Critics say that risks turning the Northwest Passage into the commercial sea route that explorers began searching for in the 15th century. The rest of the world is sure to take more notice of a shipping route between Asia and Europe that would knock 5,000 kilometres off the current route through the Panama Canal.

LOST didnt work thirty years ago, and it doesnt work now
LA Times, 12 (June 5th, Los Angeles Times, Still Lost on Law of the Sea Treaty, Los Angeles Times website,
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/ commentary/la-oe-meese-law-of-the-sea-20120605,0,6473043.story) The man who tried to renegotiate the treaty was Ambassador James Malone. In 1984, he explained why Reagan

considered LOST to be unacceptable: "The treaty's provisions were intentionally designed to promote a new world order a form of global collectivism that seeks ultimately the redistribution of the world's wealth through a complex system of manipulative central economic planning and bureaucratic coercion." Eleven years later, Malone declared: "This remains the case today." Despite the claims that the 1994 agreement "fixed" the offending deep seabed provisions, the "new and improved" pact
remained fundamentally objectionable. As senators ponder the treaty yet again, they would do well to consider the question: What, exactly, do we gain by joining LOST? In the most recent Senate hearing, Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.) asked Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs: "Does failure to ratify this treaty in any way compromise the ability of the

United States to project force around the world, to support and sustain our allies? Are we at risk as a result of failure to ratify this treaty?" Dempsey's response boiled down to "no." "Our ability to project force will not deteriorate," he said, if we refrain from ratifying the treaty. Why risk sacrificing U.S. sovereignty under the treaty if it makes us no more secure? After all, what initially established and still ensures freedom of navigation under international law is naval power. To secure navigational freedom, territorial rights and all

national and international interests addressed in LOST, we must maintain the strength of theU.S. Navy, not look to an anachronistic pact that is intent on advancing a one-world agenda.

105

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: LOST CP
Ratifying LOST means gives the UN power to raise taxes
Borowski, Policy Analyst, 2012 (Julie, May 31th, The U.N.s Law of the Sea Treaty Threatens our National
Sovereignty, Townhall.com, http://townhall.com/columnists/julieborowski/2012/05/31 /the_uns_law_of_the_sea_treaty_threatens_our_national_sovereignty/page/full/) The latest threat to U.S. sovereignty is the United Nations Law of the Sea Treaty (LOST) that is being pushed by the Obama administration. LOST rises from the dead every few years. For

more than thirty years, the United States has refused to become a party to LOST for good reasons. But this could be the year that the United States surrenders its sovereignty over the seas to an international body if Obama gets his way. Under this treaty, the U.N. would have control over 71 percent of the Earths surface. This would be a huge step towards global governance. The Senate
history, the

may vote to ratify the sea treaty as early as next week. President Ronald Reagan rejected LOST back in 1982, stating it would grant the U.N. the power to tax U.S. companies and redistribute wealth from developed to undeveloped nations. For the first time in

U.N. would have the authority to collect taxes from U.S. citizens. The thought of global taxation should send goose bumps down the spine of every American. Any form of global taxation would be a direct violation of the U.S. Constitution. American citizens are already overtaxed and no say on how the money is spent.

overregulated. The last thing we need is an unelected, unconstitutional international body imposing even more harmful taxes and regulations on us. LOST could end up costing trillions of dollars and the American people would have

US Gains nothing by signing the treaty


Darling, Senior Fellow in Governmental Studies at the Heritage Foundation, 12 (Brian, May 28th, Attacks on American
Sovereignty, Townhall.com, http://townhall.com/columnists/briandarling/2012/05/28/attack_on_american_sovereignty/page/full/) Any way you slice it, the Law of the Sea Treaty (LOST) threatens American sovereignty. So why would the Senate even consider ratifying it? Treaty

proponents such as Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry, D-Mass., claim the treaty would give the United States important new rights and advantages. But, as Heritage Foundation expert Kim Holmes, a former Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs, observed last year, LOST offers the U.S. nothing were not already entitled to under customary international law. Treaty supporters
claim ratification will give the U.S. additional rights to oil, gas and minerals in the deep seabed of its extended continental shelf, Holmes wrote. But the U.S. already has clear legal title and rights to the resources of its continental

shelf (even though the current administration bans drilling there). How ironic that the anti-drilling Obama Administration is
pushing for LOST with the argument that it would somehow it easier for American companies to drill.

106

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: Arctic Drilling CP


Arctic drilling unpopular and kills the environment Sullivan 3/26/12. John A. Sullivan, news editor for Oil and Gas Investor. Coast Guard Muscles Up Arctic Presence in Advance of
Drilling. Natural Gas Week. Lexis. http://www.lexisnexis.com/lnacui2api/returnTo.do?returnToKey=20_T15105743963

Greenpeace teams also were trying to stop vessels from the North Sea under contract by Shell to begin their voyage to Alaska. Activists boarded the <em>Fennica </em>and <em>Nordica</em>, two Arctic-class icebreakers under contract by Shell
Harbor with enough forces to make sure potential protests do not get out of hand. In addition to Dutch Harbor being the staging area for Shell's drilling plan,

and hung banners protesting the drilling before leaving the vessels. In New Zealand, a seven-person team, led by actress Lucy Lawless, occupied the vessel for four days before being arrested on charges of burglary by local law enforcement officials. Their protest delayed the ship from sailing for several days, but the drillship is expected to arrive in time for the summer drilling season beginning in June. During testimony before Alaskan lawmakers in Juneau, Coast Guard Capt. Buddy Custard said the agency will be at Dutch

June is also the start of one of the region's busiest fishing seasons and any disruptions of the port could have regional economic consequences.The Coast Guard will be watching to see what Greenpeace protesters, who are expected in large numbers, do on the water. Greenpeace spokesman James Turner told <em>Natural Gas Week</em> the green group is opposed to any drilling in the Arctic, but refused to say what the group might do in Dutch Harbor. "Greenpeace and our many thousands of supporters will continue to oppose Arctic drilling vigorously and passionately until a global framework is in place to protect the region for the long term," he said. "However, Greenpeace does not reveal what it might or might not do in the future."
The Arctic nations see the energy potential of the Arctic where some reports suggest as much as 22% of the world's potentially recoverable, but undiscovered oil and natural gas lies. And that has them at odds with Greenpeace, Turner said. "

Greenpeace believes that the Arctic should be off limits to major industrial developments like oil drilling or factory fishing," Turner said. "Even putting aside the local risks to wildlife and coastal communities, the global threat of climate change is so serious that we need to put our engineering skills and investment into developing clean energy technology instead of finding the last unconventional sources of oil." Turner also noted that a warming climate has aided access to Arctic reserves. "In terms of the Arctic drilling issue, our primary concern is that companies like Shell are choosing to ignore the clear evidence of global warming in the high north and instead are exploiting those changes to drill for more of the fossil fuel that is causing the problem," Turner said. "We believe that in years to come this will be seen as a
major mistake, especially while our transport fleet remains inefficient and clean technologies relatively undeveloped .

Arctic drilling infeasible expenses and extreme conditions Sullivan 2/27/12. John A. Sullivan, news editor for Oil and Gas Investor. Coast Guard Muscles Up Arctic Presence in
Advance of Drilling. Natural Gas Week. Lexis. http://www.lexisnexis.com/lnacui2api/returnTo.do?returnToKey=20_T15105743963
untouched by human activity. Costs: There are three words that could best describe the frontier above the Arctic Circle -- potential, mystery and costs. Potential: The US Geological Survey in 2008 issued a report stating that undiscovered, but technically recoverable Arctic frontier reserves could total 90 billion barrels of oil, 1,670 trillion cubic feet of natural gas and 44 billion barrels of natural gas liquids. Mystery: Much of the Arctic region is largely

The US Energy Information Administration estimates that developing onshore oil and natural gas projects in Arctic Alaska can cost from 50% to 100% more than undertaking a similar project in Texas. Those are some of the conclusions reached in a recent report on Arctic drilling by the Center for American Progress, a DC-based advocacy group. Even as the Arctic Council -- the nations that share an Arctic frontier border -- are working to develop plans to respond to an accident or a spill, companies are already preparing to push into the region ( related ). Among some of the highlights of this push: Royal Dutch Shell is preparing for drilling in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas by the summer; in 2011, Russia signed a $7.9 billion deal with BP and both Exxon Mobil and Chevron are expected to drill exploratory wells off the coast of Greenland before the end of the decade. However, the report concludes, while the potential rewards are high, the risks are even greater and the US and the other Arctic nations should keep the region off-limits to E&P work until a workable response program is in place. Reinforcing that conclusion was an earlier report by the US Energy Information Administration examining the cost of doing business in an environment where the temperature can reach minus 60 degrees. The EIA report pointed out that a new range of equipment based on new metals and alloys will have to be developed to endure extended exposure to freezing and subfreezing temperatures. Drilling both onshore and offshore in the Arctic will present challenges that will raise the cost of drilling, according to the EIA report. "On Arctic lands, poor soil conditions can require additional site preparation to prevent equipment and structures from sinking," the report stated. "The marshy Arctic tundra can also preclude exploration activities during the warm months of the year. In Arctic seas, the icepack can damage offshore facilities, while also hindering the shipment of personnel, materials, equipment and oil for long time periods."

107

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

A2: Consult CP
Its normal means to consult Arctic Cooperation Agreement Proves
BYERS 2012 (MICHAEL February 6Toward a Canada-Russia Axis in the Arctic
http://globalbrief.ca/blog/2012/02/06/toward-a-canada-russia-axis-in-the-arctic/)

Nor has the dispute posed a problem for Canada and the US since 1988, when the two countries concluded an Arctic Cooperation Agreement. In the treaty, the US pledges that all navigation by US icebreakers within waters claimed by Canada to be internal will be undertaken with the consent of the Government of Canada. In return, Canada promises to give consent whenever it is requested. The two countries also agree that [n]othing in this Agreement [...] nor any practice thereunder affects the respective posit ions of the
Government of the United States and of Canada on the Law of the Sea in this or other maritime areas [...]. In other wo rds, the treaty is essentially an agreement to disagree.

108

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

NEGT-In the US
In the United States excludes territories
Siksi 11 Markku Suksi, Professor (Department of Law) National Director of the EMA
Programme Sub-State Governance Through Territorial Autonomy: A Comparative Study in Constitutional Law of Powers, Procedures and Institutions Google books http://books.google.com/books?id=d7UUkiwi_9cC&pg=PA173&lpg=PA173&dq=%22the+unite d+states+excludes+territories%22&source=bl&ots=HugdwNR3e7&sig=e09lLC4W8Fxe_1bL0o CA1E4bleg&hl=en&sa=X&ei=rrhT8f3BIj69QS_y7mGCA&ved=0CC0Q6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q&f=false BK The interpretation soon emerged that Puerto Rico would be governed under the plenary powers of Congress with reference to, in particular, Article IV, section 3(2), of the US Constitution. which constitutes the so-called territorial clause and according to which "the Congress shall have Power to dispose of and make all needful Rules and Regulations respecting the Territory or other Property belonging to the United States". As a possession of the US. Puerto Rico is regarded as a territory that is unincorporated in the federal structure of the State." The political discussion continued between two alternatives, whether or not the US Constitution followed the Hag. A third interpretation, a middle ground of some sort was ultimately the one upon which the legislative approach and later also rulings of the US Supreme Court were based: the concept of the "United States" excludes territories and therefore, the new territories could be governed as colonies it" Congress so chose." This interpretation was adopted from the very beginning of the US - Puerto Rico relationship when the Organic Act of Puerto Rico, or the so called Foraker Act was enacted in 1900.

Maintaining the Northwest passage is untopical in International Waters


Campbell, 2008( 05/08/2008, United States Arctic Ocean Management & the Law of the
Sea Convention, This paper was written while on a summer externship at the U.S. Dept. of Commerce (DOC), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) General Counsel for International Law, http://www.gc.noaa.gov/documents/US_Arctic_Ocean_Mgt_08-0508.pdf) Current unresolved boundaries include the U.S. Canada boundary in the Beaufort Sea, and the Northwest Passage. Other maritime states, including the U.S., maintain the position that the Northwest Passage is an international strait, and therefore flag states enjoy a right of transit passage. 11 Canadas position is that this shipping route is on the landward side of its baseline and is therefore internal waters.

109

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

NEGT-Transportation Infrastructure
Icebreaking is distinct from transportation infrastructure
LT Benjamin Morgan, Mobility and Ice Operations, US Coast Guard Office of Maritime Transportation Systems, Domestic Icebreaking Operations, Proceedings, Spring 2011, http://www.uscg.mil/proceedings/spring2011/articles/39_Morgan.pdf While domestic icebreaking operations may fall among the Coast Guards less glamorous assignments, this mission is important for maritime mobility and supports our national transportation infrastructure .

110

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

NEGSquo Solves
Commercial incentive spurs private icebreaking ops
Scott G. Borgerson, International Affairs Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and a former Lieutenant
Affairs, March/April Commander in the U.S. Coast Guard, Arctic Meltdown: The Economic and Security Implications of Global Warming, Foreign

In order to navigate these opening sea-lanes and transport the Arctic's oil and natural gas, the world's shipyards are already building ice-capable ships. The private sector is investing billions of dollars in a fleet of Arctic tankers. In 2005, there were 262 ice-class ships in service worldwide and 234 more on order. The oil and gas markets are driving the development of cutting-edge technology and the construction of new types of ships, such as double-acting tankers, which can steam bow first through open water and then turn around and proceed stern first to smash through ice. These new ships can sail unhindered to the Arctic's burgeoning oil and gas fields without the aid of icebreakers. Such breakthroughs are revolutionizing Arctic shipping and turning what were once commercially unviable projects into booming businesses.

2008, http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/63222/scott-g-borgerson/arctic-meltdown#

Icebreakers cause more traffic and they are unnecessary due to low a low amount of ice in the Artic.
Kyung M. Song, 11(October 9th, 2011staff writer for the Seattle Times, Lawmakers confronting cold reality for pricey
icebreakers, http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2016456549_icebreaker10m.html)

The state of American capacity to ply frozen waterways has long caused alarm. Thanks to warming polar climates, what was ice is now sometimes water. Some scientists believe that the Northwest Passage, which links the Pacific and Atlantic oceans via Canada's Arctic Archipelago, could become ice-free in the summer in this century. That would open a shipping route that would be days or even weeks shorter than traversing the Panama Canal. The result is more traffic and more potential trouble, said Jeffrey Garrett, a retired Coast Guard rear admiral who has served on all three icebreakers, including as commanding officer of the Polar Sea. For instance, more
than 325 vessels crossed the Bering Strait between Russia and Alaska in 2010, a third more than just two years earlier. In 2007, a Canadian cruise ship became the first such vessel to sink in Antarctica after puncturing its hull on submerged ice. Garrett

traveled through the Northwest Passage last month. He saw hardly any ice, unusual for this time of the year. Now a Mercer
Island maritime consultant, Garrett expects to see more oil drilling, tourism, and scientific and shipping activity in the Arctic.

Loss of ice happening now oceans will be melted by 2020


Reiss has covered Arctic issues for Smithsonian, Parade and Outside Magazines, 2010 (Bob,
March 13, Cold, Hard Facts: U.S. Trails in Race for the Top of the World, Politics Daily, http://www.politicsdaily.com/2010/03/13/cold-hard-facts-u-s-trails-in-race-for-the-top-of-the-world/)

Summer sea ice shrank 40 percent between 1970 and 2007, and even agnostics on global warming such as Coast Guard Commandant Thad Allen say the U.S. better prepare for a new Arctic. "There's open water where there used to be ice. We better deal with it," he said. The issues to
consider in a defrosting Arctic include possible skirmishes over territory, a race among major powers for undersea resources, and environmental disasters from ship collisions and oil spills. "We are at a critically important time," Murkowski told the council. swaths of once inaccessible polar region open, few Americans realize how woefully behind the U.S. government has lagged in addressing security and commerce issues. For instance, tourist ships have already started sailing through the once legendary Northwest Passage, graveyard for explorers in times past. This formerly iced-over link between the Atlantic

"There are two ways we could go. The path of competition and conflict. Or cooperation." As huge and Pacific oceans is melting so fast it could very well be completely ice-free in summers as soon as 2020, according to Mead Treadwell, head of the U.S. Arctic Research Commission. That would make

commercial shipping viable, meaning that a single Chinese container ship using the Northwest Passage instead of the Panama Canal could save $2 million each way between Shanghai and New York. "The Bering Strait may become the new Panama Canal," Treadwell said. Up to 25 percent of the Earth's shipping may, in our lifetime, be sailing the polar route. The Council for Foreign Relations' Scott Borgerson said the north coast of Alaska may soon "resemble the coast of Louisiana, lit by the lights of ships and oil rigs." He predicted that some Alaskan port could become a new Singapore.

111

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

NEGA2: Arctic Conflict Advantage


No warrecognition of high risk and momentum for cooperation and peaceful resolution
Hart et al. 12 Andrew Hart, doctoral candidate at the University of Colorado, Bruce Jones, Senior Fellow and Director of the Managing
Global Order Initiative at Brookings and NYUs Center on International Cooperation, and David Steven, Senior Fellow at NYUs Center on International Cooperation and leads MGOs Geopolitics of Scarcity Project, Chill Out: Why Cooperation is Balancing Conflict Among Major Pow ers in the New Arctic, Brookings, May 2012, http://www.brookings.edu/~/media/research/files/reports/2012/5/30%20arctic%20cooperation%20jones/30%20arctic%20cooperation%20jones.pd f Over the coming decades, risk in the Arctic will continue to intensify, although there could be a pause if the region experiences a run of cold summers, if resources prove hard to extract at a reasonable cost, or if global economic malaise drives down the oil price to a level wher e the Arctics resources have no hope of being competitive. Recent

years, however, have already heightened states sensitivity to the challenges a changing Arctic poses. Sufficient momentum has been created that the impetus to explore routes for cooperation, or to unleash unilateral and coercive responses when cooperation fails, is likely to remain strong in the short to medium term. So far, the Arctic has defied the predictions of pessimists who expected the region to become a
focus for unchecked commercial and strategic competition. Given this success, can it offer some lessons for deconfliction, the management of tensions, and perhaps even cooperation in other regions where energy or resource competition has the potential to create geopolitical friction? Hardest will inevitably be the South China Seas. At one level, that terrain has a similar mix of uncharted energy resources, ill-defined boundaries, and great power security tensions. In the Arctic, the Ilulissat Agreement has set a precedent for states to apply the provisions of the Law of the Sea, despite the U.S. not ratifying that agreement. Such an approach will not easily be followed in the South China Seas, given the intensity of boundary disputes and long running tensions over Taiwan. However, some of the second-order mechanisms that have emerged in the Arctic could provide lessons towards the reduction of conflict and crisis containment in that more volatile region. In

the Arctic, states are recognizing the need for new types of cooperation to address fast-changing challenges. The United States and Russia are, of course, playing a central role, but middle powers have demonstrated their potential as conveners and pioneers of new approaches. Perhaps most importantly, the assumption of inevitable conflict in the region has been successfully challenged. In an unstable world, and one where many global arrangements are straining to adapt
to changing power dynamics, we could do worse than learn lessons from what the Arctic states are trying to achieve.

No resource warmost deposits are in non-contested areas and the rest isnt worth fighting for
Hart et al. 12 Andrew Hart, doctoral candidate at the University of Colorado, Bruce Jones, Senior Fellow and Director of the Managing
Global Order Initiative at Brookings and NYUs Center on International Cooperation, and David Steven, Senior Fellow at NYUs Center on International Cooperation and leads MGOs Geopolitics of Scarcity Project, Chill Out: Why Cooperation is Balancing Conflict Among Major Po wers in the New Arctic, Brookings, May 2012, http://www.brookings.edu/~/media/research/files/reports/2012/5/30%20arctic%20cooperation%20jones/30%20arctic%20cooperation%20jones.pd f

Tensions over resources are yet to multiply risk in the way some observers expect. Resources have the greatest potential to drive conflict when they lie in contested territory. However, overlaying a map of undiscovered energy with a map of

territorial disputes reveals that the vast majority of undiscovered reserves (85-90% as a rough estimate) are in the non-disputed EEZs of Arctic nations. This creates an important check on aggressive behavior. 67 Uncertainty about the economic viability of Arctic reserves has also played a moderating role, given technical obstacles and the high risk premium of any investment in exploitation, and the incentives for states to collaborate given the financial and technological obstacles to operating in the region. Indeed, Russias heightened interest can be explained, in part, by the fact that, alone among the five Arctic coastal states, its investment decisions are primarily state rather than market-controlled. A similar dynamic is at play for transshipment. Over the next twenty years, and however fast the ice melts, Arctic navigation will continue to be seasonal, hazardous, and unpredictableall factors that mitigate the benefits of faster routes to Asian markets. As a result,
initial excitement about Arctic navigation is giving way to a more sober assessment of the commercial opportunities that the Northwest Passage and Northern Sea Route will provide. In conclusion, it is clear that the geography of risk is shifting rapidly due to climate change, with the loss of ice proceeding more rapidly than many had predicted. Each Arctic state has had to react to these changes and to the uncertainty about how other states will react to new opportunities and threats in the region. Much popular

analysis, however, neglects factors that are slowing transformation in the Arctic (the expense and riskiness of resource extraction and navigation) or making it easier to manage (the relatively small resource endowment
that lies in contested territory). The Arctics commercial potential is still heavily discountedin other words, providing time for states to resolve strategic challenges. As a result, they have become more willing to explore what help, if any, the multilateral arena can provide.

112

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

NEGA2: Arctic Conflict Advantage


No risk of Arctic war
Tom Fries, Nonresident Senior Fellow at The Arctic Institute, Perspective Correction: How We Misinterpret Arctic Conflict, The Arctic Institute, 4/18/2012, http://www.thearcticinstitute.org/2012/04/perspective-correction-how-we.html War and conflict sell papers -- the prospect of war, current wars, remembrance of wars past. Accordingly, a growing cottage industry devotes itself to writing about the prospect of conflict among the Arctic nations and between
those nations and non-Arctic states, which is mostly code for China. As a follower of Arctic news, I see this every day, all the time: eight articles last week, five more already this week from the Moscow Times, Scientific American or what-have-you. Sometimes this future conflict is portrayed as a political battle, sometimes military, but the

all good guys and bad guys. Im convinced that this is nonsense, and I feel vindicated when I see the extent to which these countries' militaries collaborate in the high North. From last week's meeting of all eight Arctic nations' military top brass (excepting only the US; we were represented by General Charles Jacoby, head of NORAD and USNORTHCOM) to Russia-Norway collaboration on search & rescue; from US-Canada joint military exercises to US-Russia shared research in the Barents...no matter where you look, the arc of this relationship bends towards cooperation. But there's a bigger misconception that underlies the predictions of future Arctic conflict that we read every week. This is the
(usually) unspoken assumption that the governments of these states are capable of acting quickly, unilaterally and secretly to pursue their interests in the Arctic. False. This

portrayals of the states involved are cartoonish, Cold-War-ish...its

idea that some state might manage a political or military smash-and-grab while the rest of us are busy clipping our fingernails or walking the dog is ridiculous. The overwhelming weight of evidence suggests that the governments of the Arctic states are, like most massive organizations, bureaucratic messes. Infighting between federal agencies is rampant all around, as are political shoving matches between federal and state/provincial/regional governments. Money is still scarce, and chatter about military activism isnt backed up by much: Canada is engaged in a sad debate over the
downgrading of the proposed Nanisivik port; the United States icebreaker fleet is barely worth mentioning and shows little s ign of new life in the nearterm future; US Air Force assets are being moved 300+ miles south from Fairbanks to Anchorage; and Russias talk about a greater Arctic presence has been greatly inflated for the sake of the recent elections. In a more general sense, we have viciously polarized governments in the US and, to a lesser extent, Canada, as well as numerous hotter wars elsewhere that will take the lions share of our blood and treasure before the Arctic gets a drop o f either.

Established norms of conduct prevent Arctic conflict


Tom Fries, Nonresident Senior Fellow at The Arctic Institute, Perspective Correction: How We Misinterpret Arctic Conflict, The Arctic Institute, 4/18/2012, http://www.thearcticinstitute.org/2012/04/perspective-correction-how-we.html

Its not only the handcuffs of many colors worn by the Arctic states that will keep them from getting aggressive, it is also the good precedents that exist for cooperation here. Russia and Norway recently resolved a forty year-old dispute

over territory in the Barents. There are regular examples of military cooperation among the four littoral NATO states and between Norway and Russia. Even the US and Russia are finding opportunities to work together. Meanwhile, the need to develop search-and-rescue capabilities is making cross-border cooperation a necessity for all Arctic actors. There are numerous international research and private-sector ventures, even in areas other than hydrocarbons. These will only grow in importance with time. In fact, it would seem that for many of these countries, the Arctic is a welcome relief - a site where international collaboration is comparatively amicable.

113

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

NEGA2: US Sea Lanes Advantage


The trade routes are opening up
Apps, Political Risk Correspondent 12 (Pater, April 3,
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/03/us-arctic-resources-idUSBRE8320DR20120403, Reuters Melting Arctic may redraw global geopolitical map) This years frenzy of oil and gas exploration in newly accessible Arctic waters could be the harbinger of even starker changes to come. If, as many scientists predict, currently inaccessible sea lanes across the top of the world become navigable in the coming decades, they could redraw global trading routes and perhaps geopolitics.

Clearing ice will increase Chinas involvement in Arctic resources summer conditions prove
Campbell, USCC Policy Analyst on Foreign Affairs and Energy, 12 (Caitlin, April 13, 2012.
China and the Arctic: Objectives and Obstacles in the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission Staff Research Report http://www.uscc.gov/researchpapers/2012/Chinaand-the-Arctic_Apr2012.pdf) It is the consensus of many within the scientific community that large areas of the Arctic region will be ice-free during summer months in the coming decades.1 This potential environmental transformation will likely have profound impacts on regional and global trade and security, especially related to shipping patterns and resource extraction activities. While China is not an Arctic littoral state, the melting of Arctic sea ice will impact Chinas environmental, energy, and trade circumstances. As a result, official and unofficial Chinese actors have expressed greater interest in the forthcoming opening of the Arctic in recent years. However, without a claim to territory in the region, China is largely excluded from regional politics and regulatory management of Arctic resources. For this reason, China has thus far pursued a low-profile approach in its policies toward the region, and will likely have to rely on the invitation and cooperation of the Arctic states especially Russia and Canada in order to advance its interests there.

114

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

NEGA2: Environment/Oil Spills Advantage


More than the plan key to solve for Arctic spills freezing temperatures, darkness, high winds
Kroh et al, 12. Kiley Kroh, Associate Director for Ocean Communications at the Center for American Progress, Michael
Conathan, Director of Ocean Policy at the Center for American Progress, and Emma Huvos, February 2012. Putting a Freeze on Arctic Ocean Drilling. Center for American Progress. http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2012/02/pdf/arcticreport.pdf

The colder temperatures, stronger winds, darkness, snow, and ice characteristic of Arctic climates can greatly inhibit the containment and recovery equipment necessary for successful oil spill response. 38 A major component of any containment effort is the deployment of floating barriers called booms used to limit the spread of oil. Once collected, as much of the oil as possible is either recovered from the surface of the water using devices called skimmers,
or when it collects in extremely high concentrations, it can be burned off using a process known as in-situ burning. Throughout the course of the Deepwater Horizon response, nearly 900 skimmers and 13.5 million feet of boom were used as part of the mechanical recovery process, and the Coast Guard conducted 411 in-situ burns. 39, 40 Cold

hindering mechanical recovery. Additionally, nearly 2 million gallons of the dispersant Corexit were injected directly into the Macondo wellhead to help break up the oil as it gushed out so less of it would rise to the surface and reach the shore. Dispersants are not preapproved for use in Arctic conditions and likely wouldnt be a feasible option even if they were, as theyve shown reduced effectiveness in cold waters. 41 High winds like those found at times in the Arctic can also make it unsafe for response vessels to operate and prevent aircraft from flying, impeding clean up techniques and delivery of supplies. Vessel and aircraft responses are also limited by darkness. During the month of October there is less than half the amount of daylight in the Arctic than there was in the Gulf of
Mexico in May during the Deepwater Horizon cleanup. Snow can further diminish response capabilities by interfering with onshore mobilization efforts.14 As

temperatures can cause skimmers, boom, and pumps to freeze,

temperatures drop, the potential for hypothermia among responders rises and they must limit the length of their shifts, decreasing the efficiency of response operations. As Rob Powell of the World Wildlife Fund explains, this is especially significant because if a major spill were to occur in Arctic waters, cleanup crews would have to spend, on average, three to five days of each week simply standing by, watching helplessly as the blowout or spill continued to foul fragile Arctic ecosystems. 42 All these environmental challenges would make responding to an oil spill deeply challenging in the best of timesnever mind during frequent storms

Human activity in the artic increases catastrophic accedents


AP [Associated Press] 04/16/12 World's armies circle as Arctic warms to reveal untapped supplies of oil and gas
http://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/04/16/11222215-worlds-armies-circle-as-arctic-warms-to-reveal-untapped-supplies-of-oil-and-gas?lite

Heather Conley, director of the Europe program at the London-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, said militaries probably will have to rescue their own citizens in the Arctic before any confrontations arise there. "Catastrophic events, like a cruise ship suddenly sinking or an environmental accident related to the region's oil and gas exploration, would have a profound impact in the Arctic," she said. "The risk is not militarization; it is the lack of capabilities while economic development and human activity dramatically increases that is the real risk."

Arctic trade increases risk of oil spills


Mahony, EU Observer Author, 11 (Honor, EU Observer, Arctic shipping routes unlikely to be Suez of the north, Lexis Nexis, DOA: 7-10-12)
Environment And then there is the environmental impact of increased shipping. More traffic means there is a greater risk of oil spill. The ships will introduce alien species through their hull water and are likely to interrupt the migratory patterns of marine mammals. Carbon emissions could accelerate ice melting even further, and this in a region where the average temperature has risen almost twice as fast as the rest of the world's. Other ship emissions , such as SOx and NOx, may also have unforeseen consequences on the Arctic environment. Norwegian explorer Borge Ousland says it is vital not to forget that changes in the Polar regions could have global ef-fects. "It is easy to look at the Polar regions as an isolated area but any change in temperature

has an effect on the rest of the world," he said recently. "I am very worried about what I have seen in the last 20 years. When I went up to the North Pole for the first time in 1990, the ice was three to four metres thick. In 2007 we measured the ice for the Norwegian Polar Institute and the coverage of ice was now 1.7 metres thick."

115

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

NEGA2: Arctic Resources Advantage


Barriers around the Continental Shelf in Alaska prevent oil exploration from occurring- legal barriers. Peter Slaiby, 2011(July 27, 2011, Vice President, Alaska Venture, Shell Oil Company, Senate
Commerce, Science and Transportation Subcommittee on Oceans, Atmosphere, Fisheries, and Coast Guard Hearing; "Defending U.S. Economic Interests in the Changing Arctic: Is There a Strategy." http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-112shrg72568/html/CHRG112shrg72568.htm) Although regulatory and legal challenges have blocked the drilling of even a single well, I am hopeful that in 2012 we will be able to move forward with exploration wells in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas. Since returning to Alaska to purchase leases in 2005, Shell has drilled more than 400 exploration wells around the world. I remain hopeful that the barriers to exploring in Alaska's Outer Continental Shelf will be addressed so that Shell can begin its exploration drilling in 2012. Today I will focus on the economic benefits of developing our nation's Arctic oil and gas resources. Specifically: * Global energy demand forecasts, and the critical role that oil and gas will play in meeting future energy needs and in fueling the economy. * Alaska's offshore resource potential, and the benefits to the nation of developing those resources. * Shell's proposed exploration program in Alaska and the challenges that have blocked the program. * And finally, recommendations for moving forward. The world must grapple with the reality that global energy demand is projected to increase by roughly 50 percent over the next 20 years and could double by 2050. The global recession will eventually fade and as economies recover, demand will accelerate. A key driver will be strong economic growth and a vast, emerging middle-class in developing nations. To address this demand, we will need all sources of energy -hydrocarbons, alternatives, renewables and significant progress in energy efficiency. Oil and gas will be the dominant energy source for decades. Renewables and energy efficiency will play an ever-increasing role. Shell is actively pursuing research and development into next-generation biofuels. We also have a wind business in North America and Europe.Future growth for alternative energy forms will be paced by the speed of technological development, public and private investment capacity, government policies, and the affordability of energy supply. Still, it takes several decades to replace even one percent of conventional energy with a renewable source. The effort to tip the scale towards more renewable sources of energy is worthwhile but even unprecedented growth in renewables would leave an enormous energy gap that must be filled with oil and gas.

Americas foreign oil dependence has been declining since Obama took office
Slack 03/01 [Associate Director of Digital Content for the Office of Digital Strate] 03/01/12
Our Dependence on foreign oil is declining.http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2012/03/01/our-dependence-foreign-oil-declining Americas dependence on foreign oil has gone down every single year since President Obama took office. In 2010, we imported less than 50 percent of the oil our nation consumedthe first time thats happened in 13 yearsand the trend continued in 2011. Were relying less on imported oil for a number of reasons, not least that production is up here in the United States. In fact, America is producing more oil today than at any time in the last eight years. As part of his strategy to increase safe, responsible oil production in the United States, President Obama has opened millions of new acres for oil and gas exploration and we now have more working oil and gas rigs than the rest of the worldcombined.

116

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

NEGSolvency
Ice Breakers take a long time to build and require large amounts of fuel
Kyung M. Song, 11(October 9th, 2011staff writer for the Seattle Times, Lawmakers confronting cold reality for pricey icebreakers, http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2016456549_icebreaker10m.html) Rita Colwell, former director of the National Science Foundation, which runs the McMurdo Station and is the main user of the three Coast Guard icebreakers, agrees. Colwell believes the United States has long ceded dominance in the Arctic to Russia and other nations. Like Garrett, Colwell served on the National Research Council panel that recommended building two replacement icebreakers for the Polar Sea and the Polar Star. She called it an urgent military, economic and scientific issue. But Garrett and Colwell are both resigned to the likelihood that it may be a long while before a modern icebreaker gets built. So it would make sense, they say, to rescue the Polar Sea and squeeze more life out of it. Garrett acknowledges that could be akin to pouring money into fixing a beat-up gas guzzler. Still, he said, absent any foreseeable money for new vessels, that "is the only tool we have in the short term."

117

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Canada DAUniqueness Relations High


Relations higher then ever Canada loves Obama Martin 7/3/12 LAWRENCE MARTIN How Obama won Canada The Globe and Mail
Published Tuesday, Jul. 03 2012, 12:00 AM EDT http://www.theglobeandmail.com/commentary/how-obama-won-canada/article4381177/ Barack Obama is ultra popular in Canada, easily one of the most popular presidents in history . A recent Angus Reid poll found that 65 per cent of Canadian voters would vote for him, only 9 per cent for Republican Mitt Romney. Sixty per cent of Canadians think the Obama administration has been good for this country, only 13 per cent bad. So when an analysis gets published by

two Canadian heavyweights titled How Obama Lost Canada, people can be forgiven for thinking how the nameplates got mixed up. The analysis, injecting a sour bilateral note at the time of the countries birthday celebrations, was written by Derek Burney, a former ambassador to the United States, and Carleton University academic Fen Hampson in the American periodical Foreign Affairs. It has been roundly criticized by bilateral specialists on both sides of the border for lacking fairness and perspective and for being just plain obtuse. What the record shows is that given Americas dire conditions of the past few years and

given the political divides between the Ottawa and Washington governments, the relationship has been managed for the most part in a pragmatic, respectful and constructive fashion. Following the ugliness of the Bush years, things could have gone off the rails. Mr. Burney and Mr. Hampson seem to have

forgotten those years. Losing Canada? Do they recall how W. peevishly cancelled an Ottawa summit because Canada did not join his bogusly motivated invasion of Iraq? Do they recall his trying to bully Ottawa into joining his ballistic missile defence program? Do they remember the introduction of passports at the Canada-U.S. border or the Bush administrations blatant abrogation of free-trade rules in the softwood lumber dispute? How about the economic havoc Mr. Bushs policies abetted, his leaving even a one-word mention of Canada out of his landmark 9/11 address, his unilateralism in spurning a host of multilateral agreements that Canada was party to? In succeeding him, Mr. Obama immediately struck a chord. Canadians liked his moderate

values and fair-mindedness. They sensed that his heart and mind were in the right place and, despite many disappointments from him, they still do. He hasnt been pushy or overbearing in his relations with Canada as have several presidents.

118

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Canada DALink
Canada is getting upset over the US and Russia trying to enter their shorelines.
CBS News, 10(8/20/10, global news network that writes about main issues, Battle for the
Arctic heats up, http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2009/02/27/f-arcticsovereignty.html) Canadians have always tended to regard the northernmost reaches of their land as an integral, if isolated, part of the country. The vast and frozen Arctic archipelago even gets its own reference in the country's national anthem: "The true north, strong and free." But how much of "Canada's North" is Canada's? Just about everyone agrees that the many islands that dot the Arctic to the north of Canada's mainland belong to Canada. But what about the water between them? Who, if anyone, has jurisdiction over the waters separating Somerset Island from Devon Island, or Melville Island from Banks Island?The Canadian government says the jurisdiction is clear they're Canadian waters. But the U.S. and some other countries, especially now Russia, don't agree. They see the Northwest Passage as an international strait that any ship should be free to transit. And increasingly, they are seeing the Arctic seabed as a resource to be carved up among certain northern nations. Who is right? Canadian scientists are now joining the soldiers on the front lines of this battle, as they race to chart Canada's Arctic claims under the looming deadline of an international treaty. Under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, which Canada ratified in 2003, coastal countries have the right to control access to the belt of shoreline along their coasts. Barring some exceptions, that belt is 12 nautical miles (22.2 kilometres) wide. But the waterways dividing some of the islands in Canada's north are often nearly 100 kilometres wide. That would seem to leave plenty of room down the middle for foreign ships. Every country now controls the resources under its coastal waters up to 200 nautical miles from its shore. Under the treaty, a country's territory can be expanded much further if you can prove the ridges and rock formations underneath the water are connected to your continental shelf. But it's a race against time. Countries have 10 years from when they sign the treaty to submit their scientific data to a UN commission. Canada has just four years left until 2013.

119

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Canada DALink
Icebreakers in the Northern Sea Route and the Northwest Passage piss off Russia and Canada
Byers 2012 (Michael Byers, The Moscow Times, Canada Can Help Russia With Northern Sea
Route, http://byers.typepad.com/arctic/2012/06/canada-can-help-russia-with-northern-searoute.html#more 06/08/2012)
a series of contested, and increasingly ice-free, Arctic straits. Russia The Arctic Ocean's coastline belongs mostly to Russia and Canada, the two largest countries in the world. Each country owns territory on either side of

considers the narrowest parts of the Northern Sea Route to be "internal waters." Canada takes the same view of the Northwest Passage. Internal waters are not territorial waters, and foreign ships have no right to access them without permission from the coastal state. Russia and Canada face a single, common source of opposition to their claims namely, the United States, which insists that both the Northern Sea Route and the Northwest Passage are "international straits." The United States thus accepts that Russia and Canada "own" the Northern Sea Route and Northwest Passage, while asserting that foreign vessels have a right of "transit passage" through the straits that exceeds the right of "innocent passage" in regular territorial waters. A right of transit passage entitles foreign ships to pass through a strait without coastal state permission. It also means that foreign submarines can sail submerged, something that they are not allowed to do in regular territorial waters. The Northern Sea Route has become seasonally ice-free.

Thirty-two ships traversed the waterway last summer, most of them transporting natural resources from Russian ports to Asian markets. The Kremlin is intent on turning the Northern Sea Route into a commercially viable alternative to the Strait of Malacca and the Suez Canal. In September 2011, thenPrime Minister Vladimir Putin said: "The shortest route between Europe's largest markets and the Asia-Pacific region lies across the Arctic. This route is almost a third shorter than the traditional southern one. I want to stress the importance of the Northern Sea Route as an international transport artery that will rival traditional trade lanes in service fees, security and quality. States and private companies that choose the Arctic trade routes will undoubtedly reap economic advantages." The

dispute over the legal status of the Northern Sea Route began in 1965 when the U.S. Coast Guard icebreaker Northwind set out to traverse the Vilkitsky Strait between the Kara and Laptev seas. Strong diplomatic pressure was applied by the Soviet Union, pressure that, according to a U.S. State Department spokesman, extended to a threat to "go all the way" if the American ship proceeded into the strait. Washington responded by ordering the Northwind to turn around. Since then, no foreign surface vessel has sailed through the Northern Sea Route without Moscow's permission. The Northwest Passage has been ice-free for four of the last five summers. Twenty-two ships sailed through in 2011. The United States has twice sent surface vessels through the Northwest Passage without seeking Canada's permission: the SS Manhattan, an American owned-andregistered ice-strengthened super-tanker, in 1969; and the USCGC Polar Sea, a coastguard icebreaker, in 1985. On the 1985 occasion, the press attach at the Soviet Embassy in Ottawa publicly expressed support for Canada's claim: "Whether it is the Northwest Passage or the Northeast Passage does not matter. Our position is based on provisions of international law. The waters around islands belonging to a country are the internal waters of that country." But there is no evidence of any prior or subsequent statements of support by the Soviet Union or Russia for Canada's position, nor any evidence of Canadian statements in the reverse. During the Cold War, it would have been difficult enough for Canada to oppose the United
States its most powerful NATO ally on the Northwest Passage issue. Taking the Soviet Union's side in the Northern Sea Route dispute was simply not an option. As for the Soviet Union's near-complete silence on the Northwest Passage, one can postulate that Moscow decided not to disrupt the delicate balance that allowed Ottawa and Washington to "agree to disagree" on the issue. Had Moscow expressed more support for Ottawa's position, Washington might have decided that Ottawa's independent stance was no longer tolerable. But the Cold War is long over, and Russia has become an important trading partner of the West, as reflected in its recent admission to the World Trade Organization. Economic opportunities and environmental concerns dominate the policy landscape, and cooperation has replaced conflict as the dominant paradigm in the North. In January 2010, according to WikiLeaks, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper told NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen that the alliance had no role to play in the Arctic because "there is no likelihood of Arctic states going to war." Harper also said that "Canada has a good working relationship with Russia with respect to the Arctic, and a NATO presence could backfire by exacerbating tensions." Nine months later, Putin told an international conference: "It is well known that if you stand alone, you cannot survive in the Arctic. Nature alone, in this case, demands that people, nations and states help each other." Putin's comments came just a week after the Russian and Norwegian foreign ministers signed a boundary treaty for the Barents Sea, where the two countries had previously disputed 175,000 square kilometers of oil- and gas-rich seabed. Then, in May 2011, Russia, Canada, the United States, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland and Iceland signed an Arctic search-and-rescue treaty. All this cooperation provides Russia and Canada with a narrow window of opportunity. With

foreign shipping companies looking north, it is only a matter of time before other countries join the United States in overtly opposing Russia and Canada's internal waters claims. It is time for a joint Russian-Canadian position on the legal status of the Northern Sea Route and Northwest Passage before it's too late.

120

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Canada DACooperation Key


Cooperation with Canada key
Coast Guard Proceedings, 2011. Coast Guard Proceedings of Marine Safety and Security
Council Journal of Safety and Security at Sea. Spring 2011. Vol. 68. http://www.uscg.mil/proceedings/archive/2011/Vol68_No1_Spr2011.pdf The USCG and Canadian Coast Guard keep each other advised on the location and status of icebreaking facilities/assets and coordinate operations to keep critical waterways open for commerce. A cooperative agreement between our two nations allows the assets from one country to conduct icebreaking operations in the territorial waters of the other, as necessary.

121

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Canada DAQuebec Secession Impact


Secession of Quebec will embolden anti-US sentiments in Russia and prompt a nuclear attack by miscalculation[Unbeatable impact]
Lamont 94, President of American Trust for the British Library [Lansing, Breakup: The Coming End of Canada and the
Stakes for America, p. 237-239]

: Quebec's separation and the emergence to America's north of a fragmented Canada, neither event enhancing the continent's security; Canada's military inadequacies and an erosion of Canada-U.S. relations, which might send signals inviting aggression by the Western alliance's adversaries; or a political upheaval in the former Soviet Union, which would precipitate an international crisis. Any prolonged crisis, as security analysts know, involves not only heightened tensions and escalating suspicions but a shift in emphasis to preparing for a very rapid response if hostilities erupt. In such situations the usual safeguards are sometimes apt to be disregarded or even removed. That is why, with Canada's and Russia's future in doubt today, it is possible to imagine this scenario in the wake of Quebec's secession: Economic reform has collapsed throughout Russia. Widespread despair over soaring prices, injured pride
That prospect, however dim at the moment, could take on sharper tones in the context of these possible developments over Russia's loss of stature, and disgust with Moscow's leadership boil over. A cabal of so-called "Reds" and "Browns"-unreconstructed former Communist officials and neo-Fascist militaristssweeps the Yeltsin reformers from office. In the name of restoring social order and averting total economic ruin, the leaders of the coup establish an authoritarian provisional government backed by key elements of the disaffected military. The new government resents the Western Alliance for its Cold War triumph and humiliation of the Soviet Union, resents the infatuation with Western culture and consumer products. It especially resents the United States for having won the arms race and reduced Russia to a beggar nation, then acting niggardly in its response to Russian

The Russians, who have always regarded Canada as a less vehemently antiSoviet balance against the United States in the continental partnership, particularly resent Canada's fracturing after Quebec's separation and the prospect of its pieces eventually attaching to the U.S. empire. Russian-North American relations move from tepid to subfreezing. The new hardliners running the Kremlin reassess Russia's arsenal of Bear and Blackjack long-range bombers, its nearly 1,200 air-launchable cruise missiles. They reanalyze the strategic value of the Arctic, whose jigsawed desert of ice conceals not only an estimated 500 billion barrels of oil but lurking nuclear-armed submarines. Then, the Russians order a sequence of airborne reconnaissance missions to hard probe the Arctic and North American defenses. Somewhere on the eastern end of the Beaufort Sea, 30,000 feet above the approaching Parry Islands, a Russian Bear-H intercontinental bomber prepares to enter North American airspace clandestinely. The turboprop bomber, a bright red star on its side, has averaged 400 miles per hour since it left its base in Siberia and headed over the polar icecap. It carries inside its bulky frame eight AS-X-15 cruise missiles, each a little over 20 feet long, each packing a nuclear warhead with more than five times the power of the Hiroshima bomb. As it wings over Canadian territory, high enough so that air resistance is minimal, the Bear approximates the flight mode of a glider, moving silently through the ether except for short irregular bursts of acceleration from its engines. The bomber is some 200 miles off Canada's Arctic coast when the ultrasensitive radars of the North Warning System's CAM-M site at Cambridge Bay pick it up. CAM-M instantaneously relays the raw data on the unknown aircraft or "bogie" to NORAD's Region Operations
requests for massive economic aid. Control Center (ROCC) at North Bay. In the operations room of the center's subterranean complex, 600 feet deep in a Laurentian mountain, the "ass opers" (Air Surveillance Operators) start a 3112-minute sequence to establish whether the bogie is a military or civil aircraft, friend or foe, and the nature of its flight path and probable destination. The Bear does not respond to ROCC requests to identify itself. The ass opers within seconds have established some basic information on the bogie: military, unfriendly, Bear-Hotel class, and on a flight path pointing generally toward Winnipeg and Minneapolis. What the ass opers do not know is whether the Bear is carrying nuclear weapons, its intentions, and whether it is the vanguard of a possibly larger attack force. At the command post on the floor above the operations room, the commanding major general and two deputies quickly assess the ass opers' data and order fighter-interceptors to scramble from

. A pair of CF-18 Hornets, attached to the Alouettes, the 425th Tactical Fighter Squadron based in Bagotville, Quebec, race into the skies and somewhere above Victoria Island lock their radars onto the approaching Bear. One of the jets springs a fuel leak and turns back. The other, armed with six AIM-9
an airfield at Paved Paws' nearest Forward Operation Location. They also notify NORAD's central U.S. command post in Cheyenne Mountain, Colorado Sidewinder missiles and a 20-millimeter rapid-fire cannon, intercepts the intruder and buzzes it at close range. The young francophone pilot gets no response to his repeated demands that the Russians confirm whether they are carrying a nuclear payload. He frantically radios his base command for instructions and zooms in for a closer look at the bomber, narrowly avoiding the Bear's tail on the pass. The Bear's pilot takes immediate evasive action, banking his plane steeply at the same time he finally identifies himself and his payload in angry, almost threatening tones. For

The Hornet pilot prepares to respond with a warning burst from his cannon. The fuming pilot of the Bear considers activating the ejector cartridges that would thrust a single silvery cruise into the blue, streaking along its computer-programmed flight path toward a NORAD target. Then discipline and cold sense reassert themselves. The Bear makes a shuddering 180-degree turn and heads homeward. The Hornet lingers several minutes to track the Bear's retreat before it, too, swings back toward its base. In a dangerously unpredictable, post-Cold War world, some arms experts believe the chances of a fatal miscalculation happening in the near future are better than 50 percent. The likelier prospect is that a fragmented Canada without Quebec would itself
one fearful moment intruder and interceptor seem transfixed in uncertainty, hovering above the icy barrens of Victoria Island.

become a lost missile cruising aimlessly through the international sphere, its guidance system irreparably damaged, doomed to fizzle and fall into some purgatory reserved for nations that selfdestruct.

122

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Coast Guard T/O DALinks


Plan collapses the Coast Guard budget
Caldwell, Director of Homeland Security and Justice, 11 (Stephen, December 1, Coast Guard: Observations on Arctic
Requirements, Icebreakers, and Coordination with Stakeholders Testimony Before the Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation, Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, House of Representativeshttp://republicans.transportation.house.gov/Media/file/TestimonyCGMT/2011-12-1-Caldwell.pdf) As mentioned above, the Coast Guard faces budget uncertainty and it may be a significant challenge for

the Coast Guard to obtain Arctic capabilities, including icebreakers. Given our analysis of the challenges that the Coast Guard already faces in funding its existing acquisition programs, it is unlikely that the agencys budget could accommodate the level of additional funding (estimated by the High Latitude Study to range from $4.14 billion to $6.9 billion) needed to acquire new icebreakers or

reconstruct existing ones. The Recapitalization report similarly concludes that the recapitalization of the polar icebreaker fleet cannot be funded within the existing or projected Coast Guard budget. 31 All three reports reviewed alternative financing options, including the potential for leasing icebreakers, or funding icebreakers through the NSF or DOD. The Recapitalization report noted that a funding approach similar to the approach used for the Healy, which was funded through the fiscal year 1990 DOD appropriations, should be considered. 32 However, the Coast Guard has a more immediate need than DOD to acquire Arctic capabilities, including icebreakers, making it unlikely that a similar funding approach would be feasible at this time. For more details on Coast Guard funding challenges and options specific to icebreakers, see appendix IV.

Coast Guard budget spread thin new spending would force internal tradeoffs Biesecker 11. Calvin Biesecker, April 14, 2011. GAO Says Coast Guard Budget Assumptions High; Admiral Says They're
Not. Defense Daily. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_6712/is_10_250/ai_n57479707/

The Coast Guard is making unrealistically high assumptions about the budgets it can expect to receive in the coming years, a problem that could manifest itself in program delays and waiting to make trade-offs in programs that should be considered today, a Government Accountability Official (GAO) said yesterday. However, a Coast Guard Admiral said he fully understands the nation's fiscal situation but that "our requirements are our requirements" and a minimum level of funding is needed to aggressively recapitalize assets or costs will increase for new and legacy systems. "I understand that we're asking more than
we've gotten before but I believe...that we've proved our value to the nation and it's really up to Congress and the will of the people if they're willing to make that investment in their Coast Guard," Vice Adm. John Currier, deputy commandant for Mission Support, told the House Transportation and Infrastructure Subcommittee on the Coast Guard. "I think it's justified." The

biggest risk to Coast Guard's acquisition efforts is how it is marrying resources to plans, John Hutton, director of Acquisition and Sourcing Management at the GAO, told the panel. For example, the Coast Guard's long-term budget plan assumes it will receive $2.4 billion in acquisition funding in FY '15, yet the service hasn't received more than $1.5 billion in any recent fiscal year, and with "rapidly building fiscal pressures in our government, this unrealistic budget planning exacerbates the challenges the Coast Guard programs face," he said. The service has experienced a number of program funding breaches because of this unrealistic planning and there will be more cost breaches if long-term planning remains "much higher than past appropriated or requested levels," Hutton said. Rep. Frank LoBiondo (R-N.J.),
chairman of the subcommittee, said in his prepared remarks that the Coast Guard's National Security Cutter (NSC), which is being acquired to replace aging high-endurance cutters, is 38 percent over revised budget plans and two-years behind schedule. "In addition, both vessels require substantial retrofits to meet expected service lives," LoBiondo said. "That one's really hard for me to understand and accept." So far, the Coast Guard has taken delivery of two NSCs of a planned eight-ship buy. The vessels are being built by Northrop Grumman [NOC]. The third and fourth vessels are under construction and Currier said that if Congress approves a continuing budget resolution for the remainder of FY '11, which is expected to occur shortly, then the fifth ship should be under contract later this summer. Hutton also discussed a new study that the Coast Guard expects to complete this summer that is looking at its fleet needs amid the changing fiscal environment. Phase two of the Fleet Mix Analysis appears to include unrealistic cost constraints, he said. At the upper end planning for the

Coast Guard's Deepwater program, spending is expected to average $1.7 billion annually, which is higher than the service's entire acquisition program receives, Hutton said. "More importantly, we understand that the Coast Guard does not plan to assess any fleet mixes smaller than the program of
record, a step that would help them better prepare for and make any tradeoff decisions given our nation's fiscally constrained environment," he said. Hutton credited the

Coast Guard with acknowledging that it needs to establish priorities among major programs and make some tradeoffs here to better align future budgets based on historical experience. But, he said, "The key will be whether and how the Coast Guard makes such tradeoffs. This is a key moment in time and it's important that the Coast Guard does not push tradeoff decisions to tomorrow."

123

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Spending DALinks
Little spending on icebreakers nowplan would cost billions
Reprieve for Seattle-based icebreaker Polar Sea, AP, 6/15/2012, http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2018443011_apwacoastguardicebreakers1st ldwritethru.html The United States currently has only one working icebreaker, the Healy. It was used last winter to escort a
Russian tanker to Nome to make an emergency delivery after a fuel barge failed to arrive before the Bering Sea froze. The Healy is a medium-duty icebreaker designed to crush ice about 5 feet thick. The Polar Sea is designed to break through ice up to 21 feet thick. One Coast Guard study said the agency and the Navy need six heavy duty icebreakers and four medium icebreakers, the senators said. The reduction in Arctic ice has created more opportunities for Northwest Passage trade, fishing and oil exploration, as well as more environmental and security concerns. The icebreakers also travel to Antarctica to resupply McMurdo Station. The hull is the costliest part of an icebreaker to build, said Brian Baird, a former Washington congressman who is now

vice president of Vigor Industrial, formerly Todd Shipyards, which repairs the icebreakers. Building a new icebreaker could take 10 years and cost more than $800 million, Baird told The Seattle Times.

Immense cost of icebreakers means funding wont be allocated


Kroh et al, 12. Kiley Kroh, Associate Director for Ocean Communications at the Center for
American Progress, Michael Conathan, Director of Ocean Policy at the Center for American Progress, and Emma Huvos, February 2012. Putting a Freeze on Arctic Ocean Drilling. Center for American Progress. http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2012/02/pdf/arcticreport.pdf In an era of budgetary woes, the cost of updating our icebreaking capabilities will be difficult to swallow. A recent GAO analysis found that, Given the challenges that the Coast Guard already faces in funding its Deepwater acquisition program, it is unlikely that the agencys budget could accommodate the level of additional funding (estimated by the High Latitude Study to range from $4.14 billion to $6.9 billion) needed to acquire new icebreakers or reconstruct existing ones. 82

Plan too expensive almost 1 billion dollars per ship AND would take a decade to actually be operational.
ORourke, specialist in naval affairs, 6/14. Ronald ORourke Coast Guard Polar
Icebreaker Modernization: Background and Issues for Congress. Congressional Research Service. http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/weapons/RL34391.pdf The Coast Guard estimated in February 2008 that new replacement ships for the Polar Star and Polar Sea might cost between $800 million and $925 million per ship in 2008 dollars to procure. 31 The Coast Guard said that this

estimate is based on a ship with integrated electric drive, three propellers, and a combined diesel and gas (electric) propulsion plant. The icebreaking capability would be equivalent to the POLAR Class Icebreakers [i.e., Polar Star and Polar Sea] and research facilities and accommodations equivalent to HEALY. This cost includes all shipyard and government project costs. Total time

to procure a new icebreaker [including mission analysis, studies, ten years. 32

design, contract award, and construction] is

eight to

124

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Politics DAPlan Unpopular


Republicans hate the plan theyre not going to back down
Ahlers 11. Mike M. Ahlers, November 3, 2011. Polar icebreaker dispute ties up Coast Guard
appropriations. CNN. http://articles.cnn.com/2011-11-03/politics/politics_congress-polaricebreakers_1_icebreakers-polar-star-polar-sea?_s=PM:POLITICS With the nation's only two heavy-duty polar icebreakers broken and out of service, the Obama administration and congressional Republicans are clashing on how best to put the U.S. Coast Guard back into the ice-busting business. House Republicans, who say they want to force the administration's hand, are pushing a Coast Guard appropriations bill that would decommission the icebreaker Polar Star, which is now being repaired, in just three years, saying that keeping the 35year-old ship afloat is "throwing good money after bad." The bill requires the administration to come up with a comprehensive plan to replace the aging icebreaker fleet. On Thursday, the administration responded by announcing it is opposing the appropriations bill, citing the icebreaker issue.

Icebreakers are a contentious issue in the house. House republicans are fighting Obama over what to do with the fleet.
Mike M. Ahlers ,reporter for CNN, 11 (November 3, Polar icebreaker dispute ties up Coast Guard) appropriations) http://articles.cnn.com/2011-11-03/politics/politics_congress-polaricebreakers_1_icebreakers-polar-star-polar-sea?_s=PM:POLITICS With the nation's only two heavy-duty polar icebreakers broken and out of service, the Obama administration and congressional Republicans are clashing on how best to put the U.S. Coast Guard back into the ice-busting business. House Republicans, who say they want to force the administration's hand, are pushing a Coast Guard appropriations bill that would decommission the icebreaker Polar Star, which is now being repaired, in just three years, saying that keeping the 35-year-old ship afloat is "throwing good money after bad." The bill requires the administration to come up with a comprehensive plan to replace the aging icebreaker fleet. On Thursday, the administration responded by announcing it is opposing the appropriations bill, citing the icebreaker issue. Decommissioning the Polar Star would "create a significant gap in the nation's icebreaking capacity," the administration said. The ship is needed until long-term plans can be developed, it said. The Congressional Research Service said one potential concern for Congress is the absence of a plan for replacing the Polar Star upon completion of its seven- to 10-year life after it returns to service in late 2012. That is why Rep. Frank LoBiondo, R-New Jersey, included the provision to decommission the Polar Star, said spokesman Jason Galanes. "We absolutely support the Arctic icebreaker mission," Galanes said. "We're forcing this decision rather then allowing the administration to kick the can down the road."

House republicans are against repairing Ice Breakers. The plan is unpopular.
Mickey McCarter, HS today writer, 2011 (March 2nd, Coast Guard Balances Broadening Missions, Tightening Funds) http://www.hstoday.us/briefings/today-s-news-analysis/singlearticle/coast-guard-balances-broadening-missions-tighteningfunds/9375c0db781c458a2bac9e0bd643f5d9.html Congressmen led by Rep. Frank LoBiondo (R-NJ), the subcommittee chairman, questioned the Coast Guard's plan to repair a heavy polar icebreaker used in Arctic missions although it would decommission that icebreaker as soon as six months after returning it to sea. "To add insult to injury, the service intends to spend millions of unbudgeted dollars to refurbish the Polar Sea's engine and then decommission the icebreaker. This is a classic example of throwing good money after bad," LoBiondo asserted.

125

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Politics DAObama Pushes


Obama pushes the plan
AP 2011. AP News, November 4, 2011. Congress and White House differ over icebreakers.
http://townhall.com/news/politicselections/2011/11/04/congress_and_white_house_differ_over_icebreakers The country's only two heavy-duty icebreaker ships are old and broken, and Congress and the White House are at odds over how to respond as the melting of polar ice increases the economic and security stakes in the Arctic region. The House on Friday was working on a Coast Guard spending bill that would decommission the Polar Star, slated to be the last somewhat seaworthy icebreaker after its sister ship, the Polar Sea, goes out of service in the near future. The White House, in a statement issued Thursday, said it "strongly opposes" the legislation because decommissioning the Polar Star would "create a significant gap in the nation's icebreaking capacity." In the Senate, Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., is trying to block the decommissioning of either ship with a provision she added to a Coast Guard bill. The ships are based in the Seattle area and support hundreds of jobs there. "Our nation needs icebreakers," she said at the committee meeting. "With Russia moving many troops to the Arctic, and Chinese investors buying parts of Greenland, this is also a national security issue." There's little disagreement on the need for a U.S. presence in the Arctic. The Congressional Research Service, in a

report last year, said the shrinking of the icecap will result in increased commercial and military ship activity and greater exploration for oil and other resources. That calls into demand the functions of icebreakers: defending U.S. sovereignty and economic interests, monitoring sea traffic, law enforcement, conducting search and rescue operations and scientific research. " We desperately

need the Coast Guard and the administration to do what we have asked them to do really now for more than 10 years _ define what our mission is in the Arctic," said Rep. Frank LoBiondo, R-N.J., chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee's Coast Guard subcommittee. He said it costs tens of millions of dollars a year to keep the two vessels tied up at the dock, and he hopes the House move to take them out of service will push the administration into deciding how large a fleet is needed in the future. The lone Alaska congressmen, Republican Don Young, opposes decommissioning icebreakers and

wants to increase the number of vessels in any way possible, spokesman Luke Miller said. Young has introduced a bill that would authorize the Coast Guard to enter into long-term lease agreements for two new icebreakers. The icebreakers are supposed to have a 30-year service life. The Polar Star, commissioned in 1976, is docked in Seattle, in caretaker status since 2006. The Polar Sea, commissioned in 1978, suffered an engine breakdown last year and has been out of service. The Coast Guard also has a third, medium-duty icebreaker, the Healy, that is used mainly for scientific research. The White House said Congress has

previously approved funds to reactivate the Polar Star by the end of next year, extending the life of the ship for seven to 10 years. That, it said, "will stabilize the United States' existing polar fleet until long-term
icebreaking capability requirements are finalized."

126

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Private Actor CP
Private companies solve the aff better spend less money and make it more environmentally friendly
Demer 11. Lisa Demer, December 6, 2011. Shell to unveil icebreaker for Arctic Alaska
offshore drilling. Anchorage Daily News. http://www.adn.com/2011/12/05/2204274/shellabout-to-unveil-200-million.html
Alaska. The A longtime Shell contractor has nearly completed a massive, customized icebreaking ship for the company's drilling projects in the Chukchi Sea off

icebreaker is part of a specialized fleet Shell hopes to deploy for exploration drilling next summer, if it can clear all the legal and regulatory hurdles. Named the Aiviq, the Eskimo word for walrus, the $200 million, 360-foot steel vessel's main job will be to move anchor lines that will attach drilling rigs to the sea floor in the shallow Arctic. But it's also on standby in case of an oil spill -- it could recover about 10,000 barrels of spilled crude. The ship was designed to cut through ice a meter thick and likely will be able to move through thicker ice, its builder says. It can operate at minus 58 degrees. Shell points to the ship as evidence that it's serious about drilling in -- and protecting -- the fragile Arctic. Edison Chouest Offshore is building the ship at

its Larose shipyard, North American Shipbuilding. Edison Chouest is a family-owned company active in the oil business, especially in the Gulf of Mexico. Along with affiliated businesses, Edison Chouest builds, owns and operates a fleet of vessels that serves offshore oil field operations, conducts research for the National Science Foundation and engages in other marine activities, its executives say. The company has 9,000 employees around the world. The firm's president, Gary Chouest, donates thousands of dollars every year to political candidates in Louisiana, Alaska and other states. He has given to the campaigns of U.S. Rep. Don Young and U.S. Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Mark Begich. In the first quarter of this year, he and members of his family used various corporate entities to contribute $60,000 to Young's legal defense fund, according to the congressional newspaper Roll Call. Those contributions are under investigation by the U.S. House Committee on Ethics, according to Young's office. Since 2007, Chouest has donated almost $325,000 to candidates, political action committees and Republican Party organizations, including $20,000 to the Alaska Republican Party, according to the website opensecrets.org. Edison Chouest and a partner, Fairweather LLC, are building a 70,000-square-foot aviation center in Deadhorse, on Alaska's North Slope. The company has operated one of its research icebreakers, the Nathaniel Palmer, in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas, said Michael Terminel, an Edison Chouest ship captain who oversees the company's Alaska operations. The company's main Alaska project is the Aiviq. The ship's name came from a North Slope school girl as part of a competition. " It

powerful anchor-handling icebreaker," Gary Chouest said. Unloaded, the ship will weigh as much as 26,000 Chevy Suburbans, said Gary Rook, who, as technical director for Edison Chouest, designed the Aiviq. It's double hulled and was designed with redundancies like dual oil-water separators. Features include ultra low emissions -- it was built to 2016 Environmental Protection Agency standards -- and extra insulation so that it operates as quietly as possible.

will be the world's largest and most

Cooperation with private entities key to solve


Coast Guard Proceedings, 2011. Coast Guard Proceedings of Marine Safety and Security
Council Journal of Safety and Security at Sea. Spring 2011. Vol. 68. http://www.uscg.mil/proceedings/archive/2011/Vol68_No1_Spr2011.pdf Another vital component of the continued success of the domestic icebreaking program is sustaining professional relationships with commercial industry stakeholders such as the Lake CarriersAssociation, tug/tow operators, commercial fishing fleets, ferry services, and the businesses thatrely on year-round maritime transportation. Close cooperation with commercial icebreaking companies is also important, as there are many demands for icebreaking assistance on the Great Lakes that the Coast Guard simply cannot meet. Working together, the Coast Guard will continue to meet the demands of commercial shipping, and prepare for successful operations well into the future.

127

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Private Actor CP
Private sector investment key to solve Young, Alaskan congressman, 6/7/12. Don Young, Rep. Young Works to Keep
Icebreaker from Being Scrapped http://donyoung.house.gov/News/DocumentSingle.aspx?DocumentID=298929 Fighting to prevent one third of our nations icebreaking fleet from being scrapped, Alaskan Congressman Don Young today successfully attached an amendment to H.R. 5887, the Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation Act of 2012. Rep. Youngs amendment aims to gauge private sector interest in operating an icebreaker and directs the Coast Guard to also assess any interest the private sector would have in buying or leasing the USCGC Polar Sea. This amendment builds on a provision
already contained in the underlying bill that requires the Coast Guard to complete an assessment and report back to Congress on what the cost would be to refurbish and get the ship back into service. I have said it before and Ill say it again our

icebreaking capabilities are woefully inadequate, said Rep. Young. The race for the Arctic and its resources has begun and we need to ensure all capable icebreakers are in service. The Coast Guard must explore all possibilities; that means making sure were not completely scrapping an icebreaker that the private sector has shown interest in. Its time to get creative -- whether its leasing or owning icebreakers, or even working with the private sector, we must work harder to improve our icebreaking capability.

Private firms should develop Icebreakers, and they could be leased out
DeMarban, 2012 (Alex, April11th, writer for Alaska Dispatch, Should Alaska Take the Lead in Financing New Icebreakers, Alaska Dispatch, http://www.alaskadispatch.com/article/shouldalaska-take-lead-financing-new-icebreakers) "Without access to heavy icebreakers, we will be unable to adapt to historic changes in the Arctic," Young wrote. "Icebreakers are critical for ensuring safe shipping and resource operations and providing for field research opportunities." He continues: "Given the current fiscal climate in D.C., funding the acquisition of new vessels presents a significant challenge. It is clear that we must consider creative financing and ownership options to move forward." In addition to helping bankroll the project, the state should also think about owning an icebreaker with private firms. The state could refurbish the Polar Sea or the Polar Star. It could then lease its icebreakers to the Coast Guard and N ational Science Foundation, wrote Young.

Congress supports the usage of privately owned icebreakers Forgey, Reporter at Juneau Empire, 11 (Pat, December 2nd, Congress Urged to Act on

Icebreakers, Juneauempire.com, http://juneauempire.com/local/2011-12-02/congress-urgedact-icebreakers#.T_5DzXCUo5B) Among the strategies the committee discussed for beefing up the countrys icebreaking fleet was leasing privately owned vessels, just recently the topic of discussion at an Arctic investment forum at the University of Alaska Southeast. That strategy got aggressive support from at least one Republican member of Congress, but there were concerns as well. Treadwell said Arctic ice cover was at historic minimums, but still limited activity in the winter. Ice-breaking capability extends the season as ice begins forming in the fall, and then breaks up in the spring. Other strategies for asserting American sovereignty that were discussed included ratification of the Law of the Sea Treaty and developing further north port infrastructure. Papp said having the ice-breaking cutter Healy operating in
Arctic waters helps the U.S. assert its claims there. The Healy provides a sovereign presence in those waters, Papp said. Rep. Jeff Landry, R-La., repeatedly advocated the use of leasing to get the United States new icebreakers. Those new vessels would presumably be built in his home state, where Shell Oil Co. is building its own icebreaking vessels. Treadwell said leasing

privately owned icebreakers might be the way to go. It seems like it may be a way to get us the capability that the admiral needs, Treadwell said.

128

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

LOST CP
US ratification of the treaty facilitates government credibility and legitimacy
Smith, Colonel U.S. Air Force, 10 (Reginald R. Smith , Oct 27, 2010
http://www.ndu.edu/press/lib/images/jfq-62/JFQ62_117-124_Smith.pdf The Arctic: A New Partnership Paradigm or the Next Cold War?) DG
the Arctic along the lines of an Antarctic-like treaty preserving the notions of sovereignty and resource exploitation in the region. 79 With The significance of the declaration is paramount to cooperation in that UNCLOS provides the international rallying point for the Arctic states. 78 Similarly important, by virtue of the unanimous and strong affirmation of UNCLOS, the declaration effectively delegitimized the notion to administer

U.S. participation and declaration of support for UNCLOS in these venues, failure to ratify the treaty suggests that U.S. credibility and legitimacy, and hence the ability to build cohesive multilateral partnerships, are appreciably degraded.
This conclusion is illustrated in Malaysias and Indonesias refusal to join the Proliferation Security Initiative using the U.S. refusal to accede to UNCLOS a s their main argument. 80

Accession to the treaty appears to be a key first step to preserving U.S. vital interests in the Arctic and building necessary credibility for regional and global partnerships in the political spectrum. Equally important to political partnerships in the region are those available through military collaboration of the Arctic nations. There are a number of existing constructs for military partnership, most of which are currently bilateral and trilateral militaryto-military ventures among the Arctic states and other interested states. The majority of these constructs are military exercises, such as the joint Canadian-Danish-American Northern Deployment 2009, that promote interoperability and cooperation among participating nations . 81 Others include

longstanding mutual defense organizations such as the U.S. and Canadian integration in the North American Aerospace Defense Command, a standard that has been suggested for an overall Arctic collaboration model. 82 Similarly, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) includes among its membership all Arctic states except Russia. While NATO supports member states and has exercised member militaries in the Arctic areas off Norway, it is a divisive influence when trying to include Russia in an Arctic solution set. 83 Ad hoc arrangements also promote cooperation as in the 2010 agreement between Norway and the United States solidifying a plan for the two national navies to train together in the northern Norwegian waters. 84 Another ad hoc relationship is also forming among the Scandinavian countries seeking to enhance security in the Arctic. 85 The North Atlantic and North Pacific Coast Guard Forums are multilateral organizations that promote information sharing and cooperative efforts in a number of maritime issues including SAR. These forums have been generally successful in promoting maritime cooperation through information sharing and interoperability through training exercises and may provide a model for similar cooperation in the Arctic region. 86 Another program that shows promise for a more broad-based cooperative effort is the U.S. Coast Guards Shiprider initiative, under which the United States and partner nations exchange maritime law enforcement officials on each others patrol vessels, allowing rule of law enforcement in both host and partner nation waters. 87

To one extent or another, all Arctic coastal states have indicated a willingness to establish and maintain a military presence in the high north. 88 However, decidedly lacking among the Arctic nations military forces is a unifying construct to promote cooperation and mutual interests in an allinclusive multilateral basis. This is similarly reflected in the U.S. military enterprise as there are currently no mechanisms for joint operations in the Arctic. 89 Promoting a new broad-based military partnership paradigm to complement those opportunities available and emerging in the political arena seems to be the next logical step for preservation of the United States vital Arctic interests.

129

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

LOST CP
The US needs to ratify their claim to the arctic through the UN to prevent disputes.
Carlson, Jon D.., Hubach, Chris., Long, Joe., Minteer, Kellen. and Young, Shane. 2009 (April 02 The Scramble for the Arctic: The United Nations Convention on the Law of the
Sea and Extending National Seabed Claims) http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p363540_index.html The Convention on the Law of the Sea is unique in that the mechanism for the settlement of disputes is incorporated into the document, making it obligatory for parties to the Convention to go through the settlement procedure in case of a dispute with another party. Thus, inherent in the Convention is
Typically, the mechanisms for resolving disputes resulting from an international treaty are contained in a separate protocol. the vision that it is a dispute-resolution mechanism. During negotiations many countries were opposed to the idea of a binding settlement being decided by third party judges and insisted that issues could be resolved by way of direct negotiations between claimant parties. Others pointed to failed negotiations and long-standing disputes leading to armed conflict and argued that the only way to insure peaceful settlements was to insure that states

If direct negotiations fail, a choice of four other procedures are available: submission of the dispute to the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, adjudication by the International Court of Justice, submission to binding international arbitration procedures or submission to special arbitration tribunals with expertise in specific types of disputes (The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea [A historical perspective],
bind themselves in advance to accept the rulings of judicial bodies. A compromise was settled upon. 1998). So at its heart, UNCLOS is a regime instrument designed to obviate the very types of disputes that are at present emergent in the Arctic. The question, then, is will this attempt at dispute resolution and mediation prove successful, or will so-called realist visions of power-seeking international behavior emerge as dominant?

The US does not have a legitimate claim to any Arctic territory because they have failed to ratify the UNCLOS
Carlson, Jon D.., Hubach, Chris., Long, Joe., Minteer, Kellen. and Young, Shane. 2009 (April 02 The Scramble for the Arctic: The United Nations Convention on the Law of the
Sea and Extending National Seabed Claims) http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p363540_index.html However, by not being a signatory state to the UNCLOS, the US does not have access to the forum in which their claim could be protected. Despite being deeply involved in the initial actions that led to the creation of UNCLOS, the
United States has yet to ratify the treaty. The treaty was attacked by President Reagan as, socialism run amok and a third world giveaway (Salvaging the Law of the Sea, 1994). Conservatives

strongly dissent with the claim made by the Convention that seabed wealth beyond territorial limits is the worlds common heritage. Their basic position is, if that wealth belongs to everybody, why is anybodys permission needed to reap it? (cf. Salvaging the Law of the Sea, 1994). Yet there is significant area north of current holdings off the Alaskan North Slope that could be solidified, and claimed as within American territorial limits. And this seems to be at the heart of the shift away from such a hard-line Republican position: other countries are extending the delineation of their territory, and less is being left as common heritage.

130

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

LOST CP
Ratification of UNCLOS would benefit the US more than any other country, promoting heg
NRC et al 07 (National Research Council , Polar Research Board,Marine Board (MB)Earth
and Life Studies (DELS)Transportation Research Board, Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard , Polar Icebreakers in a Changing World:An Assessment of U.S. Needs. Online PDF at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=11753#orgs ) UNCLOS was crafted to manage and protect the natural resources of the worlds oceans and outline unifying provisions concerning rights of maritime navigation, transit regimes, continental shelf jurisdiction, exclusive economic zones (EEZs), and seabed mining. Exactly 149 countries have ratified the convention, including almost every industrialized nation except the United States. 5 When first proposed in 1982, President Ronald Reagan had objections to the
conventions provisions on seabed mining. This part of the convention was rectified in the 1994 Agreement on Part XI. Preside nt Clinton signed the treaty and sent it to Congress where it still awaits accession. It is clear that accession to the treaty by Congress has been supported by more than one administration with the concurrence of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, the U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy, the Pew Commission, the U.S. Navy, and others. Because

the United States is the worlds largest maritime power with the longest coastline and largest continental shelves in the world, the country is poised to benefit the most from ratification. This far-reaching framework is consistent with our national security, economic, and environmental interests in the oceans while promoting international approaches to dispute settlements and means of managing open sea resources.

131

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Arctic Task Force CP


CP Text: The United States federal government should coordinate with Russia to develop the Multinational Artic Task Force. The CP solves conflict over the Artic by increasing cooperation with other countries and creating better relations, that spills over to solve global issues
Smith, Colonel U.S. Air Force, 10 (Reginald R. Smith , Oct 27, 2010
http://www.ndu.edu/press/lib/images/jfq-62/JFQ62_117-124_Smith.pdf The Arctic: A New Partnership Paradigm or the Next Cold War?) DG
Using SARa nonthreatening and apolitical issue of interest to all Arctic and other user nationsas the means to open the partnership door, the United States, in coordination with Russia, should develop the Multinational

Arctic Task Force (MNATF). Foundational support for development of the organization will be facilitated through a joint U.S.- and Russia-sponsored multinational SAR exercise involving all the Arctic nations, notionally entitled Operation Arctic Light (OAL). Through the planning and execution of OAL, Arctic nations will build trust, exchange ideas, build relationships, and see and experience the benefits of collaboration. The natural progression over time can be shaped toward formalizing the exercise into an overarching coordination organization that perpetuates OAL, along the lines of the North Atlantic and North Pacific Coast Guard Forums, which evolves into the desired MNATF construct. MNATF would initially be comprised of the military representatives of the Arctic Five plus the additionally recognized Arctic nations of Iceland, Sweden, and Finland. The mandate of the organization would be the regional coordination, synchronization, and combination of member countries SAR activities, resources, and capabilities to meet the needs of the region. The initial operational capability concept is a regional SAR organization
that leverages the contributions of each member country into a synergistic operational command capable of responding rapidly to SAR crises in the Arctic region. Building on a model similar to the Shiprider program, MNATF may expand mission

sets commensurate with perceived regional needs and the desires of member nations to include rule of law enforcement on the high seas, resource protection, and antipiracy/antiterrorism. The outgrowth of this construct will be the improved safety, security, and stability of the region to the benefit of not only member nations, but also the world at large. Corollary benefits of this new Arctic
paradigm will include the partnerships formed and cooperation of nations through information sharing and capability integration.

Finally, for the United States, MNATF effectively fills a critical capability gap, adds credible action to the NSPD 66 Arctic Region Policy directives, and supports the preservation of U.S. vital interests in the Arctic region.

132

SCFI 2012
Shackelford/Gannon/Stevenson

Icebreakers Aff
___ of ___

Jones Act CP
Exemption from The Jones Act would provide a strong incentive
Carafano and Dean 11 (Deputy Director of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom, Deputy
Director, Foreign, Defense, Trade, and HSP in the Gov. Relations Department at Heritage, James, James, States News Service, Breaking an Ice-Bound U.S. Policy: A Proposal for Operating in the Arctic, Heritage Foundation, Accessed through Lexis Nexis , DOA:7/10) To aid commercial ice-breaking, Congress should exempt U.S. firms from the requirement to comply with the Jones Act. The Merchant Marine Act of 1920, also known as the Jones Act, was meant to save the merchant marine industry by requiring that ships that traveled American waters be built in the United States and manned by American crews. Like many other protectionist policies, the premises of the Jones Act seem plausible: Require goods moving from one U.S. port to another to travel on U.S.-built ships, with U.S. crews, and you will protect U.S. maritime and shipbuilding jobs. The last serious review of the Jones Act (a series of congressional hearings in the 1990s) revealed that more than 40,000 American merchant seamen and 40,000 longshoremen had lost their jobs despite Jones Act protectionism. Over the first 76 years of the act, more than 60 U.S. shipyards had gone out of business, eliminating 200,000 jobs. If the intent of the Jones Act was to save U.S. jobs, it failed. As a result, state-ofthe-art ice-breakers can be built over-seas today at far less expense. Exempting U.S. contractors from having to comply with an outdated law that has brought more damage than benefit to the U.S. maritime industry would provide a strong incentive for future ice-breaker operators.

133

You might also like